What are you all playing? I’ve been playing a ton of Mario world ROM hacks. I beat super nothing world. Now I’m playing some hacks by the jump team
Hellblade II is almost certainly coming out this year, perhaps very soon, so I got Hellblade: Senua’s Sacrifice for a few dollars on the recent Steam sale. It’s certainly a looker, but I would prefer if the mechanics were a bit more sophisticated. Maybe it’ll get there, but I’m a few hours in now, and I’m pretty sure I’ve seen the entire loop. The combat and puzzle mechanics are both what I’d call serviceable, but it’s really the presentation in this game that they knocked out of the park, yet I still don’t know if that’s enough for me to give the game a glowing recommendation, even if I am enjoying the game.
I’m still making progress in Pillars of Eternity ahead of Avowed’s release, finally getting into some of the White March content, around level 6. The game remains great, but my biggest criticism thus far is still that the intended player level for a given area or quest should be better communicated. I end up timidly doing the stuff that I’m confident is around my level rather than the content that appears to be most interesting to me at the time.
Some friends and I started up a co-op game of Quake II in the remaster, and holy cow, this is so much better than our time in the first Quake, due in no small part to that compass feature they added. The era of FPS games I’m most into would be the era just beyond Quake II’s initial release, and the biggest difference, I’d say, between those two eras in level design is that the older “boomer shooters” would let you get lost in a maze while their successors would close off access to most of the areas that you don’t need to bother with yet/anymore, alleviating frustration. It also just feels so much better right out of the gate than the previous Quake, and the levels are somewhat trying to approximate a space that would exist in a fiction created for the game rather than just being a vague labyrinth with monsters in it.
In another co-op group, I’m in the early hours of Titan Quest, as a way of dipping my toes into the loot game genre, which I hadn’t really had a taste for in the past. I figured with the sequel on the way, and no desire to touch Diablo with a ten foot pole, this would be a good time to do it. We just had to fight a centaur that I’m not sure whether it counts as a boss or not; hopefully bosses in this game are more interesting than that one was, because with the skills we had access to in the early game (not many), the fight was mostly just running around in circles and taking shots at him when we could without getting pummeled.
You’ve seen everything Hellblade has to offer in the combat department. I enjoyed it personally; it’s really slick in its simplicity, but you are right that it’s not the main draw. Hellblade shines in its performances, journey, and presentation, like you said. Some of the set pieces are just striking in the best (and worst) ways.
It’s a really effective and unique experience overall.
Trying to play Alan Wake 2. Trying as in no time but still try to make a bit of time for it.
Monster Hunter World. Spectacular game and seems to be having a second wind right now is player base.
Been playing Dishonored for the first time and really enjoying it. I’m only at the bridge and trying to play a low/no kill game. I’m not succeeding just yet, but it’s been really enjoyable and they do stealth really well. I’m baffled that they mismanaged to get the team that made this and Prey to push out Redfall? Man.
Just picked up FFVII after the second or third hiatus or my third or fourth attempt to play it. FINALLY made it to the Nibelheim story and past Midgard. And that somehow still manages to work on me as a first time player.
Just beat Banner Saga 1 and have never felt so much like a failure after “beating” a game. That game is trying to unseat This War of Mine for decisions regretted/minute.
I’m wanting to start up my Nintendo series playthroughs again by either starting Mario Galaxy 2 or trying to remember what on earth was happening in Majora’s Mask (3DS) something about the water temple maybe?
I’m baffled that they mismanaged to get the team that made this and Prey to push out Redfall? Man.
It wasn’t actually the same studio, Dishonored was made by Arkane Lyon while Redfall was made by Arkane Austin. Arkane Lyon are the ones working on the upcoming Marvel’s Blade game, however.
So Prey team made Redfall and Dishonored team is making the new Blade game? Good to know!
Quake Champions, still my fav shooter
Trying The Last of Us on PC. The TAA in this game is atrocious, everything is a smear fest
Just finished Observer: System Redux. It’s a cyberpunk/horror game made by a Polish studio. They did a good job using the medium to create a sense of dread and foreboding.
Also playing Aurora, the free 4x most people compare to Dwarf Fortress. A new release came out a few weeks ago and it’s fun to learn the new mechanics.
Oh yeah with Rutger Hauer. I’ve been meaning to play that, I have it in my steam library. Thanks for the reminder.
I’ve been grinding that Diablo 4 and enjoying it a lot.
After I finished the campaign, I made it to World Tier 4 (highest difficulty) pretty quickly, and I’m now level 97. I fulfilled my dream of becoming a bear that punches millions of demons, so that’s pretty cool. Although I can’t be a bear all the time though, which is pretty lame. In town, I’m forced to run around as a boring human.
The next season begins in 10 days, and I don’t know if there’s a short break in between. Level 100 should definitely be possible, and a few other “milestones,” but I don’t know if I manage to do everything I’d like to.
In Diablo 3, I’d usually play at the start of a season for a few weeks, and then take a break until the next one, so I never burned myself out on it. Since I started Diablo 4 at the tail end of the season, I’ll probably end up playing a lot longer than I’d usually do, so burn out is definitely possible for me. A new character should hopefully freshen things up enough, and a friend might also play with me.
Network performance was much better this week, although there are still some hiccups here and there, mainly during the Legion events.
Unless they change it with the upcoming season, there’s no downtime between seasons for Diablo 4 like there is with 3, but they do give you the whole season to sort through your inventory in the eternal realm instead of just 30 days.
You mean when your seasonal characters become non-season and your items are mailed to you? In the beginning I was sorting through stuff, still keeping some items, but later I just destroyed almost everything, since I don’t play non-season anyway, so I’ll probably do the same here.
It sucks, that there’s apparently no rebirth feature, like D3 had. I liked playing essentially the same characters over and over again from level 1, and not having to delete them and make a new one.
I miss the rebirth feature as well. I’ve heard whispers and rumors that the devs may add it in the future since it’s requested so much, but that’s just hearsay.
Tribal Wars. They came over Steam.
CastleClicker on mobile.
Path of Exile and Blade & Sorcery over VR.@chloyster Guild Wars 2 World vs World and Ghost Recon Breakpoint (which was on deep discount). The latter appears to have been mostly turned around with regards to its release bugs but I am still in the process of gauging the capability of the enemy AI.
The fact that you can tweak the gameplay details on a scale of “the division Style looter shooter” right up to “almost mil-sim” levels is quite impressive to me.So I recently have been playing Cult of the Lamb, a few Doom wads, and had been trying to get some Skyrim mods wokring…
More excitiingly though I was actually approached by this company called Maple Leaf Studio to playtest this game called Realm of Ink. Haven’t mentioned it much on my social medias mainly because they had me sign an NDA. The game is quite fun and very pretty, it’s kind of like Hades but has this awesome art style themed off of Chinese Mythology.
Now that the demo’s public though I’m allowed to talk about it, the link’s here if you wanna check it out - https://store.steampowered.com/app/2597080/Realm_of_Ink/
Hitman.
Fuck the always online shit, but since last time I played they added a rogue lite mode. “Just kill randomly selected NPCs on existing maps” doesn’t sound mind blowing (and occasionally a level feels kind of trivial), but the “die and they’re on alert, die again and start over without your gear” format combined with limited access to gear really does give a fresh, high stakes feel.
Alan Wake 2. I’ll spare any commentary on all the things it does well and that make it a one of the most ambitiously distinctive (AAA) games…ever? because that’s been well covered.
On the other hand, I am kinda surprised that the combat is as… deficient as it is. I never liked the combat experience in the first game. I don’t like how the enemies were programmed to run off screen to the sides of view, because Alan isn’t nimble enough to pivot direction sufficiently to track multiple enemies, and it just felt cheap and frustrating. Dodging is clunky too.
Control was the next Remedy game I played, and I thought the combat in that game was fantastic. The gunplay felt right, and the paranormal powers were weighty and responsive. Even the levitate power looks and feels fantastic; the animation is super cool and I love watching it.
So I had high hopes for Alan Wake 2, but the combat again feels too imprecise and unbalanced. Dodging is still clunky, projectiles clip through objects, etc.
Oh well. It’s a bummer, but in a game like this it’s well overshadowed by the strengths.
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Firing up the old PS2 and playing some Odin Sphere