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  1. HandsomeDead

    Hades

    So this is the action rogue-like from makers of Bastion and Transistor. It's a very good one. It has a lot of potential stuff in terms of weapons, buffs and abilities for a run that come together in some surprisingly interesting ways. I don't really want to go into it all, because there is so much and it's a bit of a spoiler, in a way. I do think anyone who likes Dead Cells will have a hard time not getting into this too. It's got the same kind of fast, dash-y combat but I'd argue the upgrades are probably more interesting because they're tied to more than your attacks. I guess Dead Cells has some of that but it's robust with a bigger variety of abilities that can tie to your dash, for example. But Dead Cells is better in some other ways. They're both cool and good; get both! I'm also quite enjoying the story more than I expected. It's set in Greek mythologies' underworld and done in quite traditional way in that it's mostly a family squabble the consequences of which is big, dramatic and violent fights and supernatural displays of power. It's kinda fun that you're trying to escape the underworld in a rogue-like and no-one really cares that you're doing that because they know you'll die and be back. Some give quiet encouragement or Hades himself just rolls his eyes as you leave. It's played pretty straight and it's cool to hang out in that starting area before the intense combat. I'm not sure how many stages there are but the best I've done is get to the third boss, who are a pair of cheaters. I dunno how I'm meant to do it right now. I think since I don't have a brilliant way to do a well synchronised build yet, just out of inexperience, but I'll get it.
  2. Hendo

    Dead Cells

    Only played a few minutes before I go to sleep, but yep, pretty sweet so far. One thing I thought was really cool is that one of the menu options is you can change the appearance of the food in game. Could be as simple as you’re veggie or vegan and you would rather not everything be meat, but there’s also some silly options like “Castlevaniaesque” and “monster”. In related and weird news, IGN (or their freelancer) appear to have stolen an indie guy’s video review script. Apparently IGN hav taken down their review while they investigate.
  3. yeah so, i like this, it's a bit different to previous mgs games, in that the map is massive and you do missions in smaller parts - and you get a horse to ride around on - bit like the witcher 3. controls are confusing like normal, but pretty well explained. there seems to be a lot of scope for sneaking and doing things differently which is cool, but i am a bit rubbish at it and often get spotted while trying to be sneaky and end up killing loads of people - which is what i usually do in mgs games. doesn't seem to be an easy mode but it's not been too difficult so far. there is a chicken hat you can equip that stops you getting spotted a few times after you fail once or something - that might be the easy mode - unclear. you can hide while riding your horse by sort of hanging off one side of the horse, i thought that sounded ace so... the into/prologue part is a sort of long interactive cutscene, which has some funny/cool bits, and some rubbish/boring bits imo. after the first bit there hasn't been that much dialogue/cutscenes which is odd. but i'm not too far in so there's still time. extracting stuff is awesome.
  4. Maryokutai

    Tiny Bookshop

    Bought this a few days ago and I think this might, maybe, possibly, be a game some other people are interested in. As the name implies you're the owner of a small bookshop (in the form of a trailer you drive around with) and try to make a living in a small coastal town by visiting certain places and selling books. The books are categorised into genres like crime, fantasy, non-fiction etc. and certain areas favour one or the other – for example, if you go to the beach, you should pack a couple more children's books than usual because they're good sellers there (keep in mind this is a game of fiction and does not represent reality). You can also decorate your shop and certain decorations influence people's buying habits. A chair or a dog (don't ask) will make people stay around longer and possibly purchase more, whereas certain items with a theme could result in higher sales of related books, ie. spooky decorations push Stephen King novels and such. So below the cozy fassade this has some very manipulative capitalist energy but ultimately it's all done in a cute and inoffensive manner. The majority of the book sales happen automatically, meaning you see people walk in and out of the trailer and tiny speech bubbles showing what they're buying. But a couple of times per day someone will ask for a recommendation, which is where the slightly more active part of the process begins. Someone might ask for an easy read with few pages, someone might specifically ask for certain themes or time periods. For the most part it's easy enough to find the right one as there's also a bit of leeway, but occasionally you come across one that doesn't make much sense (asking for a happy ending but refusing your recommendation if it doesn't have one for example). Some are also a bit weird, like a fanatic of classic plays being super happy when you recommend Hamlet, as if they'd never heard or read about it. The books are real-life books of course. At first I was a bit disappointed there wasn't a list of what you could stock but ultimately this would just be an incomplete list of, well, any book ever written, so kind of pointless. The way it works is that you buy them pre-owned without any clue what's in the box and only by the time you're out and about and someone wants a recommendation can you actually go through what's on display and make an informed choice. There's a short summary of everything and I've already taken screenshots of a few that sound interesting. It's also not snobbishly discrimating, you can have Shakespeare and Le Guin right next to manga like Sailor Moon or Dragon Ball, which I think helps to make it more believable. I think it's a nice cozy game for this season, nothing too deep but also not mind-numbingly passive, a nice middleground that might even indirectly give you a recommendation here and there. Also looks fine on Switch 2 handheld mode despite being a Switch 1 game, though I suspect native resolution on a Steamdeck for example would fare even better (keep in mind the screenshots look worse than the game because of Switch 2 compression). This was my very first recommendation btw., I think the game is stalking my IP.
  5. radiofloyd

    Pyre

    I've played over an hour of this now in about three 20 minute bursts. I like it but it is very different to Transistor (and the early parts of Bastion that I played). The game is part visual novel, part rpg. It's not as text heavy as a game like Sunless Sea (nor remotely as free-form), but the story is told through text like in the second picture above. Pyre is not remotely an action game. It's been described as a sports game in some reviews, but I think that's a bit laughably over the top. The "combat", known as Rites, does resemble a sport in that you have to take a ball and carry it into your opponents "pyre"...but I think this is the one element of the game that does resemble Transistor to some extent. Actually now that I'm typing this maybe it is closer to basketball than Transistor but anyway, I'm not going to call it a "sports" game just yet. During the basketball match (I've given up) you can perform actions like sprinting, jumping, passing and even throwing the ball into the enemy's pyre (oh my god it's basketball). If you don't have the ball you can cast your aura, i.e. attack an enemy. Each team has three characters and you can only control one character at a time. If a character is attacked they are banished for a certain period of time. Each individual character has stats that govern how much damage they do to an enemy pyre, how long they are banished for etc. Each character also has a skill tree and you can pick new abilities when they level up, and each character can also equip one "talisman" that has some kind of stat boosting effect. Those are the rpg elements. The visual novel elements are basically everything else. You move from point to point on the map (so far the game has been almost entirely linear) and this will usually trigger some kind of story event or conversation among your party that is told through text. In one hour I haven't experience much of the story but basically your characters are exiled in some kind of wasteland, and completing this rites ceremony seems to be some way to obtain freedom for them. There is no full voice acting (the characters make a few squables when they speak a la Zelda) except for the character who seems to control the rites, I don't know what it is but his voice seems to remind me of movies like Tron and Logan's Run. So far, it's an intriguing game, and you definitely can't accuse Supergiant of retreading old ground. Artistically, in terms of visuals and music, it's too early to comment but the signs are that this will match their earlier games.
  6. This is just for the demo so far... release isn't too far away now though. I'm presuming this isn't too far in to the game, you start out already having met Carlos and entering the Subway train, after a brief conversation you're free to head up to the streets. First impressions... and it's a big one, HDR is vastly improved over RE2... I wish they'd actually go back and fix that but after a year its highly unlikely, anyway it's a lot better in this game. It controls very similar to RE2 but with the added dodge, I actually had to go and change the controller setup as I didn't like where they'd put run (clicking left stick) with the change it felt much better. Obviously it looks lovely, already it's a much more colourful game than RE2, shooting feels pretty much identical... all though I think they may have toned down the zombie dismemberment a tad... presumably because there's more on screen. I've had a good wonder around, it's got some nice little shortcuts you can open up to move around easier and I'm surprised at how many shops you could actually enter. I didn't actually get to finish the demo though... Nemisis killed me...? Everything is looking good to me so far, fingers crossed that shitty real life virus doesn't delay the game.
  7. one-armed dwarf

    UFO 50

    I thought there might be a thread for this, but there isn't. So I'll be the one to make one for the weird indie game Premise is you've got 50 games which are emulative of the style of 8bit to early 16bit era, all released by this fake company called 'Ufosoft' which shut down in the 90s. Games which are dungeon explorers, side scrolling beat em ups, weird puzzlers where you're a chameleon blending into tiles, a kinda horse betting game. Game where you hop around platforms kicking soccerballs at things. A platformer all about suiciding yourself. Apparently there's a full 20 hour classic FF style turn based RPG in there, and an Ultima style first person dungeon crawler. Lots of weird shit The games are hard. You have to actually learn them, it ain't Warioware. Naturally, as an impatient person, I'm full of salt and rage at some of it. But it is interesting, the games get more sophisticated and better to control over the 'years'. Eg, pick up the final game they released, Cyber Owls, which is a beat-em-up that 'released' in 1989, and compare it to Fist Hell from 1987. Similar mechanics but more intuitive movement and faster gameplay. Also some of the games have couch multiplayer. Some of the games are good, some seem crap though like the weird egg dungeon crawler at the beginning where they kill you for walking right. I don't have much history with this era of gaming but it's been talked up a whole lot this year so after enjoying Balatro so much that it's potential GOTY for me I thought I'd try to expand my horizons on here. So maybe I bump this later way more keen on it, or someone else might find it interesting. I did find this one potentially interesting title, Bug Hunter (1984), which is this strategic kinda turn based bomberman game you see below where you have to kill bugs. I think the idea is to find your niche and get comfortable with a few familiar games first before branching out into the more scary ones (which for me, are platformers. Fuck man, great way to get me tilted 😠) Very original idea for a game, but fuck I bet it took a shitload of work to get 50 of them. Some are a bit more throaway like the camoflague gecko game though so maybe there's some sensible overlap that they achieve when implementing them This seems to just be Windows currently, but you could probably play it on any old machine. Definitely expect to see it on Switch eventually
  8. Got my copy early so gave this a go this afternoon after I finished The Inpatient. Starts off similarly to a lot of Monster Hunters, getting you into your camp quite quickly after a few scripted sequences, tutorials and lots of cutscenes. Spent awhile honing my character - went for my traditional ginger lady, had to change her hair as soon as I was able to in camp though as it just looked shite. Went for a tour of the camp and tried to take in where everything is, there’s definitely a lot to take in but I remember quite a bit of the layout already. Chose my weapon - went for the Insect Glaive. Tried it out in the training room afterwards and had an absolute blast with it, felt like Dante or Bayonetta or some shit, I was doing aerial gymnastics like nobodies business. Went on a quest after this to kill some jagras which was incredibly simple, cool to finally get to do my first quest. As soon as I finished all the online stuff opened up, I didn’t even realise the servers were online yet. Messed about a bit with the squads and checking out the new gathering hall which is fantastic. I’ve created a squad for us by the way, it’s called MFGamers - unsurprisingly - if you search for it whenever y’all get the game it should pop up, if not send me a message and I’ll invite you. Hardly got into it really, but it looks and feels phenomenal so far, cannot wait to get truly stuck in to some tough monsters in my next session.
  9. Ok. So I’m a huge Dragonball Z fan. I first watched the series back in my 20’s, via the heavily edited Toonami dub (people never died, they got sent to ‘Another Dimension’). Years later I rewatched the American dub. And a few years after that, the Japanese original. I still have a lot of love for the series. So I was certainly interested in this. Visually, it absolutely nails it. It looks exactly like an episode of the anime. And it’s certainly a nice touch that you can play either with English or Japanese audio. It doesn’t get off to a great start gameplay wise though, with a pretty poor ‘training’ mission. I’ve seen a few videos of “stuff the game doesn’t tell you”. And a glaring omission is how to fight. Sure, you get three pages of a control pad, showing you what the buttons are. But there’s no explanation given in how to actually fight an enemy. I know, as a fan, that you have to charge Ki to perform energy attacks. But it doesn’t tell you that, so newcomers may be a bit puzzled why their special moves aren’t working. There’s a couple of prompts at the bottom of the screen (hold these buttons to do this move). But as far as tutorials go, it’s not great. I then experienced a bug which meant I had to reload my game. “Walk with Gohan to the fishing spot” I was told. Great. Except Gohan vanished, and after 5 minutes of searching it was clear he’d fucked off into thin air. Part of the game is open world, where you can fly around collecting Z orbs of different colours, to level up your abilities. Again, the game doesn’t tell you what these are for. Then there’s the Community Board, which is frankly a mess. You get a board, and when you meet characters and perform certain actions, you gain their icon, and can place them on your board. Putting certain characters next to each other grants you bonuses in combat. Some characters have their own board (Goku’s wife, Chi Chi, and his trainer Master Roshi). How do you add icons onto their board? I don’t have a fucking clue. It speaks volumes that the first time you access this part of the game, you’re barraged with about 6 pages of information. And I’m still none the wiser on what the fuck to do with it. Anyway, only a couple of hours in. Maybe things will make more sense as I go along. Or it won’t, and I’ll just mash buttons and hope for the best.
  10. There's kind of been 3 types of Ys games over the years. The first couple you just bashed in to enemies, then they became hyper, isometric, all about attacking. Then we got to the 3D versions and it was still a game about going on the attack, but now what type of attack was important. You'd eventually gather 3 characters, a sword character (red), a blunt attack character (blue), and a piercing character (green), different enemy types are weak to different attack types, and you can switch on the fly to suit And that's how it's been for a few games now. Ys IX follows the same formula, but brings in a more traditional RPG structure. Previously side quests would task you with just getting certain drops, you'd get them from your home base, which was a tiny area, and that would be it. 99.9% of the time you were out killing things Ys IX is a little different, structured like a traditional JRPG, it starts slow, with the plot set up, then some short easy combat to ease you in, then a chunk more story. The world is no longer 1 small safe area then a world of combat, instead you're in a city, with combat, shopping, side quests, and exploration taking place throughout, I've not seen this in an Ys game before, even if it's fairly typical for the genre. You're eased in to the world with quests to visit shops and buy gear, it's a little slow going. There's still "dungeons", sections where there's nothing but combat and exploration, but now there's also little dimension pockets where you can enter combat and fight a handful of enemies, then just carry on with whatever you were supposed to be doing The tower defence style sections are still here, now you're whisked away at certain points to fight as a team, protecting a crystal, against waves of enemies. Not especially interesting, and the camera annoyed me a little with this, it maybe could do with being pulled back a bit so you see more of the field, but then they've not been too demanding so far, so maybe it doesn't matter also it's all anime goth now
  11. Finally bought a new game for my PC. Sure, it was 37 quid and looks like Skyrim, but that's neither here nor there. I think everyone knows it's a bit of a TES clone, down to most of the controls (at least on Xbox pad) being in the same configuration - Y for jump etc. I'm expecting, over the course of the next 50 hours, to be questing, lock picking, alchemy-ing and, most importantly, collecting flora and fauna for the cooking of. My build will be one handed with shield for parrying, and a side line in conjuration. So, pretty much my favourite TES build. Played an hour. Couldn't be happier. For now, at least.
  12. Started playing this yesterday, was recently on a sale (would have loved to pay full price on release, but without a disc on Xbox, well...). The beginning is all over the place and retroactively made me appreciate just how strong an opening Life is Strange had back in the day. Showed you the tornado as the big climax on the horizon and then immediately grounds you with that wonderful sequence in the school's corridors. Lost Records feels more like a JJ Abrams kind of thing where it has that mystery carrot dangling in front of you but remains so vague for so long you start to wonder if the payoff will be worth it. The story starts off very It-like, in the sense that a group of friends did something when they were teens, then made an oath never to talk about it again but at the beginning of the game one of them contacts the protagonist to meet up and it then moves on from there. It's split between the present and flashbacks in the mid-nineties. In an odd twist, the scenes in the present take place in first person – whether this is a stylistic choice or is paving the way towards a twist involving the protagonist's appearance I don't know yet. Kind of leaning towards the latter, and it certainly adds to the mystery. But no matter the perspective this is a Don't Nod narrative adventure through and through, meaning you slowly walk through slightly stylised but detailed environments, look at objects and have your character monologue about things. In between doing that there's dialogue scenes where you pick answers that influence future narrative beats and relationships. So in that sense very much what you'd expect and, frankly, why I'm here for because I really like the LiS games. What's new is that, Telltale style, there's now a time limit on answers, so saying nothing is an option as well. Dialogue also flows naturally 'around' the timing of your picks, a bit like in Dustborn (which was very popular on here), though not as janky, thankfully. The characters so far are relatively stereotypical, but again, that's kind of what I'm here for. Certainly not unlikeable though, the usual bunch of outcasts and nerds that don't quite fit in. Another big element of this game and one I'm not entirely convinced by yet, is using your camcorder to record footage. It's simultaneously used for story progression, for example by having in-universe interviews with your friends, but also doubles down as the equivalent of the camera from LiS1, so to highlight different collectibles in the area, which are thematically linked. For example, if you film a bunch of posters, signs and other things that belong to a movie rental store, they'll get linked up and Swann (the protagonist) will make a little highlight reel with the clips your recorded. On one side it's a neat little interactive feature that does a good job of capturing the magic a camera had on millennials like us before babies got born holding smartphones in their hands. On the other hand it kind of feels like you need to run around with the camera a lot, which distracts from its native visual style and atmosphere. Which might be some clever kind of meta commentary, possibly. I don't hate it, but I think I preferred the simple nature of Max's camera. It hasn't blown me away as of yet, mostly due to how slow the opening is and how often it shifts between present and past. But at the same time I'm quite hooked as to what's going on and it hints rather subtly at some stuff I'm not going to spoil here that goes beyond what I was expecting (though, in fairness, I haven't seen a single trailer or review for this). It took me around 2 hours yesterday just to get to the part where they show the game's title so it's safe to assume I've only seen what would be considered the prologue.
  13. I don't know how to give impressions on this without getting in the weeds. In terms of features it's an old fashioned 2D fighting game. You have an arcade mode (which is kinda interesting in that the better you do the harder the end boss gets) and there is a story that is literally an anime that you just watch, which is what the last game did too but it's still wild to me. There's also a pretty intense Mission Mode that does it's best to teach you the deeper mechanics of the game which if you're the studious type could work pretty well. I could do with spending more time in it myself but getting wrecked by someone using my character then trying to rip them off in the next match is more fun for me. It's the good netcode that saves it though. Well, the matchmaking is pretty rough at the mo but it plays really well in game. It just means there's always people to play with. This came online at midnight and I was ready to play it so I went to the east coast of USA since it was a more sensible time there and while it was a little choppy visually my inputs were barely delayed, if at all. I really hope they put this in a DBFZ2, in fact it would be shocking if they didn't. I've not saved many fights yet since I think I'm still pretty scrubby but my Gio is coming along a little. And this fight with Zato was fun when I wasn't put in the corner with all his nonsense:
  14. Lots of Oblivion chat so figure I'd post it here I played about 4 hours or so, picked an Acrobat Orc. Lots of jumping, punching and arrow shooting. I have alteration as a major skill, I guess I can use that for shield magic so I don't have to block. It's interesting to revisit as you can imo still sort of feel how BGS generated this sort of inertia with their games that led to them stagnating a lot with Starfield, it kinda starts with this game. But I do think Oblivion is cool in spite of its flaws, it has some of the most interesting one-off questlines. Like the guy who you have to rescue out of a watercolour painting, which I did the other day. I always like the sort of weird episodic style of its storytelling, even if the over-arching narrative is a bit derivative. I don't think I'll be spending too long in Cyrodil this time tho, it's really hard to overlook the level scaling. That you can be at your wits end cracking a hard safe and your reward is another lockpick to replace the 8 you broke and 3 Septims. This is just the kind of thing that when you notice it it can destroy the feeling of exploration, to the point it makes Oblivion the hardest one to return to I think (apparently Skyrim fixed this? I don't know). I'm probably going to just use this as a zone out game now and then when I want a distraction rather than take it too seriously. It got me to install Daggerfall again so I might do the two simultaneously, one for relaxing one for stressing out cause of screaming skeletons. Here's a screenshot with the hardware lumen stuff maxed out, tho I'm keeping it turned off cause it runs badly. It mainly adds/improves self-shadowing to foliage and other things. There's a few minor changes I notice like how when you go up a steep incline, your character's walk animation changes. When you level up, you get these ten 'virtues' to spread across at most three different stats and the amount you spend seems connected with the things you did to gain the level up. So you are still tailoring your character in such a way that their actions govern their attributes, but they don't have this same min-max issue which causes problems in the 2006 game if you get paltry bonuses each level (caused by not leveling minor skills or ignoring the largest bonuses) and falling behind the level scaled enemies. Theoretically that's not an issue here but you won't know until you're at like level 14 or whatever Your health regens out of combat, I don't actually like this change tbh. Hope they let you toggle it off cause I like making potions to do that instead, for the role playing experience and so that mistakes matter more in combat (not that they matter that much or anything, but still) The game looks good enough, but it's got a beige-pink colour grading on everything. It doesn't have the same artstyle as 2006
  15. retroed

    Battlefield 1

    I've been playing a bit of the campaign, and it is so much better than I was expecting it to be. It is called War Stories and is split into five separate parts following different characters and scenarios. I've only done the first one after the prologue so far, Through Mud and Blood where you and your squad are pushing forward in a British Mk V tank, and it was really good. It is quite poignant in places, and has great use of music. It looks bloody fantastic, too. Not tried the multiplayer yet, which says something of the single player as it's normally the thing I go for first in a FPS. If you leave it on the War Stories menu long enough, a lovely piece of music with a female vocalist starts playing and it is quite beautiful.
  16. This is the collection that came out a year or so ago that has both the PS1 games in it. We have a thread for the Wii remake, which I'd completely forgotten about, but that seems to be an actual remake and didn't include the sequel. There's also a PS2 port, which I've played, and we'll get to in a bit, and I think that may have been a remake too. First off, I've played through the first game, Klonoa: Door to Phantomile, it's pretty good, and it looks alright all things considered. You couldn't tell looking at it that it was a PS1 game originally. The cutscenes are slow as fuck, there's an option to skip or fast forward them, but a bit of editing wouldn't have been the worst choice, so I've no idea what the plot is because I'm not sitting through all that. The game plays fine, for the most part, the design is pretty simple, early 3d platformer in that it's polygons that you traverse in 2d. You grab enemies and throw them at other enemies and items. Later this is so you can solve puzzles to progress, and these can get tricky, but also use them to double jump. Again, easy enough at first, you're just climbing up to higher platforms, but gets much tougher later. There's a few rough edges, some old fashioned elements with how hit and miss contact can be with enemies, particularly in the background, and it's tougher than something like Kirby which it's most similar too. The bit where it does show it's age is the movement. There's a very digital, block by block feel to how the game handles. There's no overstep to edges, grabs, or the game being generous enough to extend your jump so you make it when you maybe shouldn't quite. It's most noticeable in the more difficult platforming, if you're not precise then it's not happening, but as the world moves in the same stiff pattern as you do it can be a bit maddening. It's where that PS2 version I mentioned comes in. That's the version I've played the most, and I swear the movement is smoother than here. It's that era of Japanese exclusive remakes like the Sega Ages line, so I think it's a full remake of the game, and as such controls a little more fluid. It wouldn't amaze me if that's what the Wii version was based off. Maybe I'm imagining it, but while this is a pretty good version, I'd probably rather play that one
  17. Wow, no thread for this? I'm surprised. Been dipping and diving into lots of different PC games and struggling to find something that really grabs me. This is it, I think. I'm only about 90 minutes in, so far it's an adventure set in a dilapidated world that feels marked by communism, or on the verge of some sort of ugly class upheaval. You're a very hungover detective who doesn't really know what's happening but there's a case you got to investigate. But maybe the real thing you got to investigate is who you are and what has happened to you. Sound familiar? I really like it so far. It's basically just a game about reading lots of text so far and passing/failing speech checks. I don't really get all the systems yet, but it's like PS:T through the lens of Jack Kerouac or William S Burroughs. Absolutely fucked up and manky but very beautifully written heaps of text everywhere. The screen where they show you all your perks/specialities is so aggressively wordy. I don't know if there is actually any combat in the game because every perk seems to be based around some personality trait
  18. Finished this a few days ago, rather enjoyed it so I thought I'd give it a bit more exposure. From what I can tell it's based on one of those internet properties, as in someone is drawing little comics with the characters and selling merchandise and such. Interesting idea to translate this into a full videogame, but the end result speaks for itself. This follows the template of a very classic JRPG with exploration, puzzles and turn-based combat. You play a new character in this specific universe that gets thrown into a little time-travelling storyline, where you need to visit certain areas and time periods to destroy core nodes of an evil plant that wants to destroy humanity and restore earth to its primordial origins. In that sense it's not subtle with its environmental themes and it kind of makes the antagonist sympathetic in a way, like you sometimes root (pun intended) for Poison Ivy in a Batman comic. Though in this case the enemy isn't some attractive model but rather a weird amalgamation of vines and thorns that can possess other living beings. While you're time-jumping around you're controlling a party of four and dispatching said mutated enemies in turn-based combat. It's a relatively basic, straightforward combat system with four different attack types and therefore four different potential weaknesses on both your end and enemies. A timeline in the upper right corner shows the turn order and it's here where it adds a tiny bit of unique depth to systems, as you can alter that timeline by spending some energy and, for example, move one of your teammates in front of an enemy to maybe get some healing done before they can hit you. I doesn't go much further than that and stays very simple as a result though. There's only two or three bosses where I had to go out of my way to incorporate a proper tactic, like forcing one half of a boss duo to duel on of my characters (by moving their turn to coincide with one of mine) so that they couldn't use their devastating team-combo. But otherwise this doesn't go beyond what your usual Mario RPG would do – which was fine for me, but might be a bit too limited for other people. One thing I enjoyed is that how much it crammed into its relatively short length (16 hours). You visit a ton of different locales – farms, schools, Paris by night –, the storyline does tackle quite a few different subjects and gives every party member breathing room, resulting in a game that feels significantly larger than its playtime suggests. It also doesn't shy away from more dark moments, but portrays them in a very digestible manner through some rather well-written dialogue. While you time-hop around you cross paths with one NPC at different stages of her life, which gives it a very human anchor to mould the storyline around. I do love how very French it feels, too. A lot of games are either very Asian or very American these days, so it's always nice to see something like this pop up and have a French farmer girl make fun of the Parisian high society, or people using Euro as their currency, or just every atom of its design channel classic French/European comic artwork. For a small game it's also very polished, with rather beautiful visuals, nice UI work, really good character portraits, a genuinely great soundtrack. Some of the puzzle designs can seem a bit badly signposted but I ended up getting through without too much trouble. Twice I had a character die in battle but remain at 1HP so I couldn't revive them, which was a bit annoying the second time as it was a boss battle so I kind of had to let them kill myself to retry. But ultimately this is a very accomplished effort all around. I played the Switch version on Switch 2 and it's mostly 60fps, but when I checked its performance on Switch 1 earlier this year it looked kind of rough, so Switch 2 or PC is the way to go here I'd say. (Also, Nintendo has to do something about screenshots on Switch 2. There's no reason for them to get saved in such awful quality.)
  19. The very king of fighting games is back, and I'm head over heels with the little beauty. It looks and plays incredible. So much detail and so fluid in motion. I know I'll be posting in this thread in five years time, although tbf, probably as the avid spectator to online tournaments that I've been for 10 years by now. Truth is I've never been able to play the thing to any degree of competence, I just like watching other people do it. Having said that I've decided to do something I've never done when (trying) to play it. I'm going to go with grapplers. Maybe slowing things down a bit for myself might be more appropriate for my age - (advanced)!
  20. regemond

    AI Limit

    A Soulslike from top to bottom, AI Limit adds a female protagonist that you can play dress up with then calls it a day. Honestly, that's a little bit reductive, but this game genuinely plays like My First Dark Souls. You run from area to area, battling with tough enemies along the way before eventually stumbling across a boss who seems to exist for no other reason than to make you question your life choices. To be honest, I reckon I'm about half way through now, and despite a complete lack of originality in concept, gameplay and everything in between, I'm actually mostly enjoying it. There are the occasional jumps from challenging into sheer frustration, but it's mainly my own fault. Whenever I lose focus I end up screwing up repeatedly. Combat is exactly what you expect. Light and heavy attacks, various spells, a couple of different defence strategies. Parry, dodge, defend, roll. All that good stuff. But with a sci-fi edge that leans into post-apocalypse. The looks are... serviceable. Like, you can throw a maid outfit on the player character if you want, but each outfit is tied to different stats and resistances, so it's not all about the titillation. I do like the almost cel-shaded look of the Blader you play as, and I do like the design of enemies, but there's also this filter that makes the whole game look a bit... I dunno, muddy? It's almost like the devs wanted to ape Stellar Blade, but didn't have the balls to go all out like that did. Along the way there are secret quest lines, hidden areas, random things to pick up, and something the game calls Corrupted Bladers - tough enemies that hit hard, fast and can mess up your timing a hell of a lot. Nothing is impossible to beat, but if you let your concentration slip, you can and will be absolutely battered, even by simple enemies. One thing I do really, really like over the SoulsBorne titles I've tried is the change to losing currency. Usually, you'll lose all your cash and have to retrieve it. This game takes a percentage of the currency off you and that's it. Right now, I lose 25% every time I die, but there are accessories you can equip that change this amount, as well as the total amount accumulated. It keeps the risk/reward aspect - a death can bump you back under your next level up amount, after all - but doesn't make it quite as frustrating, and also means you don't just need to bash your head against a boss over and over again to get your souls back. You can also use it tactically. Bump it up enough and you can let yourself get taken down for a quick shortcut back to the nearest branch (this game's bonfires). As someone who REALLY struggles with FromSoft titles and other similar games, the My First Dark Souls comment is really accurate. The fact I've made a modicum of progress, and only occasionally have to switch off because it dips from challenging to frustrating is what's keeping me going right now. For anyone with experience in this genre, I'd say avoid it, unless the style really grabs you. If you're someone who WANTS to get into this kinda game, but isn't up to the difficulty of FromSoft games, I'd say give it a go and see how you get on with it.
  21. So, you might have noticed that I decided to stop hating on the PC games. Due to Popcap giving Peggle Nights away, I've spent a fair bit of time playing that on and off, and it got me thinking about all the stuff I have missed. I'm not talking about all those games that will break Deep Blue trying to run, but those other games, you know, the ones that play better on a mouse and keyboard. Except FPS, everyone with half a brain would tell you those are better on a control pad. http://www.mfgamers.com/public/style_emoticons/#EMO_DIR#/tongue.gif So with that in mind, the first game I decide to run on my decrepit rig is Civilizations IV. Now I liked Civilizations Revolutions on the 360, it was rather good, it reminded me of playing a version of Colonization that I had on my old Amiga 1200, but more modern, you know because we had moved on 15 years and you would expect that. So that's what I was expecting, a more complicated Civilization Revolution. People had told me that Civ IV was way more complicated than Civ Rev, but I didn't really believe them until I actually got a hands on with this bastard. Yesterday I played through the tutorial, and while picking up the thick end of it there were bits that went completely over my head. Seriously, I f I were to compare these two games I would say imagine playing Snakes and Ladders, then moving on to Monopoly with ruthless players. It possibly has one of the biggest learning curves I have ever witnessed. Saying that, after cracking on with the tutorial again and this time completing the first scenario taking more in than I did the first time, I got into it. I must have done, because the tutorial and the first win took me over 4 HOURS which seemed to fly past in an instance. Seriously, I can see some rounds of this going over days, it's OK now, because I have a few days off, but otherwise this is a long term game. Gone are the days of Civ Rev when you could finish a game in just over an hour, It's going to take that long to get a couple of cities up and running and protected. Saying that, I am having fun with it and I can see myself playing for a few weeks until I have taken each empire to the top via various means. Once I have done this I'll be ready to go on to onw of the next old PC games I missed out on. Hell, if I really get into it, I might upgrade my PC so I can play stuff that was released less than 2 years ago.
  22. I’ve played this for 4 hours now. And the harsh reviews can honestly fuck right off. They’re way off the mark, in my opinion. Usually, Skill Up does decent reviews, but I don’t agree with his video review of this. He moans that unlocking “Knigthood” for all 4 characters is a massive grind. Is it bollocks. There are two ways to level up. All characters share regular XP, so you can freely switch between them. But each character has a 4th skill tree, Knighthood. This needs to be unlocked for each character, and you do so by killing 3 mini bosses, and solving 10 crimes. In my 4 hours, I’ve got Knighthood unlocked for 2 characters, and almost done it for a 3rd. The way he moans, it’s like it’s a huge chore. He also creams his jeans over Arkham Knight. Personally, I thought that game was boring as fuck. I’ve had more fun with this, than I ever did with that. I’ve also seen some people complain that one fight sequence has the rock remix of Livin’ La Vida Loca. To those people I say “Have you even played Saints Fucking God-awful Row?”. What a stupid complaint. Anyways. Combat-wise, this ain’t Arkham. There’s stealth takedowns, but I’ve not had opportunity to use them much. So far, there’s not the vast array of gadgets that Batman had in Arkham. But, each character has their own play style, and abilities. Robin has been quite fun so far. A lot of people got pissed off when it was revealed this is 30fps on consoles. I’m no graphics expert, and to be quite honest, I’m happy with how this looks on PS5. It looks pretty damn good to me. The story has been interesting so far, and it’s worth swapping characters, as they periodically have their own side missions, which further develop how they’re coping with the loss of Batman. So yeah. I’m having a great time with this so far.
  23. Labelled as a stand alone dlc to the Robocop game from a couple of years ago, there's enough to Robocop Unfinished Business that it feels like more than that. Granted you'd hope for a little more variety in a proper sequel, not because the core shooting is bad, just that it's unchanged from Rouge City The plot is kind of The Raid or the more recent Judge Dredd film, in that it's set in a residential tower block and you're kind of working through it. It's actually where the lack of budget shows because you don't really get a sense you're working through a building, it feels a bit circular and unconnected from each level. The story is that someone has stolen Robocops chair thing, they clearly need it for something nefarious so Robocop tracks them down to an OCP owned apartment block. OCP have moved a bunch of people in but it's all a con, even ignoring the mercenaries that have now taken it over, the residents were sold a con and are pretty desperate. The game is still trudging around and shooting everyone. I still think Robocop is a bit too vulnerable all things considered, but it has to have some challenge I suppose. The issue I have is I tend to linger behind cover and try to pick off enemies, rather than wade in like I think you're supposed to. You get a couple of flashbacks to play through, even at least one none Robocop one. There's a couple of new enemies that I've seen so far, and at least one new weapon. It's been a little glitchy so far, although nothing game breaking for me, although it seems to vary with people experiencing worse than me (I was able to hold 6 health items at some point for some reason). It's still fun though, not as good as the main game, but worth a play if you liked that one, and there's a lot of game for the cheaper price
  24. one-armed dwarf

    Kenshi

    Speaking of RPGs with hard edges I've put 30 hours into this, though it's maybe closer to 25 hours on this attempt. I bought it years ago and found it one of the most baffling games I tried to get into, even though I generally like games with hostile worlds and mechanics. Tried it again the past week and now I'm surprised how much more typical it really is, at least in these initial hours. The background is that it was made by a very very small team over the course of 12 years, I think initially just one dude who had a background in TES modding (which definitely shows here in that it has its skill system, where you learn by doing). What it is is a sort of squad-management open world RPG, with a very amorphous structure, set in a post-technological world where you're given no quarter. It gives you basic tutorials for mechanics, but you have to pick your own objectives and be disciplined about completing them step by step. You don't just follow a questline, you make your own stories although there is a background lore to discover also. You pick a background, I picked wanderer which starts you off in 'the hub' which is this derelict town with destroyed walls and buildings, and a pub. You presumably can build the place back up, but lore documents around the area suggest that it's a regular target of some religious sect or something. So I didn't bother. You can also pick a starter character who's a slave and has to break out of jail, which sounds really interesting. There's an 'easy' one where you start off with a squad already, a sort of Mad Max one where it's like the wanderer but you also have a dog. You can even start off in a camp of cannibals, definitely not where you want to start learning the game cause if someone does manage to eat your arm off, it's gone forever (tho robotic prosthetics exist) This is a screenshot of most of the early hours, when I tried my hand at solo bounty hunting. These guys just left me like that cause they're racists, but other factions are more helpful So after realising that you can't play the game like that, I decided to become a farmer (which is what my character's proficiencies were in anyway, not slicing things with swords). Found some arable land near a hive village where I could grow wheat and grapefruit and turn them into rice, bread and fuel, also set up a small stone mine. Built a base around it and a small shop to sell surplus produce to wandering caravan traders. Spent the income from that on hiring more people from the pubs in nearby cities, but not too many cause it's not a large farm. You can script jobs for your characters with a sort of gambit style system, if they can't do the first job they do the next one and so on, and will go to sleep and eat when they need to and defend each other from weird dinosaurs. So once you figure this out you basically automatically generate resources and money. It's very satisfying when you get a self-sustaining loop going like this But one issue I have is I've totally neglected defense, and am reliant on the nearby town to defend me from threats. Some bandits already tried to extort me, I stabbed the leader in the face and he came back seeking revenge which nearly got hairy, so I need to buff up and get weapons if I don't want to have to pay a protection racket. Also I'm bored of the farming and want to be able to explore beyond this one weird forest I've spent most of the game in, so I have a team of 7 now, 4 labourers and 3 fighters, I had my engineer sneak in the nearby weapon shop to steal some buster swords, and we're going to hire a mercenary on contract for a few days to attempt some harder bounties. Which probably would really cut into the bounty itself if I don't do it fast There's a vid here of the slave background which shows off a really different experience to the one I describe, where it's more top down RPG Metal Gear Solid. The point is you can sort of mould the game into a very different role playing experience if the idea of base building and optimising your farm sounds dreadfully boring
  25. The actual title doesn't contain Shin Megami Tensei in it, which is probably because it's already stupidly long, but it'd do wonders for brand recognition. Anyway, Raidou Remastered: The Mystery of the Soulless Army was a PS2 Devil Summoner game, and this is a remaster / remake of it, somewhere in between because it's definitely upscaled cutscenes and quite possibly game world but they've adjusted the combat and gameplay. Apparently, I've never played the original. The combat is more active than a usual jrpg, kind of like Ni No Kuni. In battles you're locked in the combat area and you, as Raidou, can use light and heavy attacks, shoot enemies to stop them dodging about, and increasingly lob some slowly recharging magic. What makes Raidou unique as a Devil Summoner is that he can summon 2 demons to help him rather than 1. These demons generally act on their own, although you can tell them to cast specific things, and you can tell them to not use magic if you're low on mp The MP system works differently too. Your team all share one bar, and your demons will constantly be using magic ideally, so you really need to recover MP constantly. Fortunately, using your light attack gets you MP back, although it doesn't do as much damage, so you want to alternate between lots of light attacks and a heavy to mix recovery with actual damage. There's a few other moves too, specials that can be triggered at points, and the ability to hide your demons when really powerful attacks are coming Outside of combat the story has been pretty interesting so far. A girl who asked us to kill her then got kidnapped by demons, so we're sorting that out. From what I understand each chapter is it's own thing. You use your demons out of battle too, occasionally to help with the investigation, sometimes just to recover items So far I'm really enjoying it. It's pretty easy, although I suppose how many fights you get in to determines that. You can avoid a lot, but it's probably not a great idea early on while the combat feels fresh, just so you don't end up having to grind for a boss
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