I still need to track down a copy of Coast 2 Coast - I have OR2 on the original Xbox and Online Arcade (again before it was discontinued) on the Xbox 360. And I loved the first game from '86 too. A great series, but it does kind of need that Ferrari license. It does lose something when it has to use a generic Ferrari-ish (Ferrarish?) car instead. But it wouldn't surprise me if Ferrari wanted far too much now for what is a relatively niche type of racing game, it'll never be Gran Turismo or Forza or Assetto Corsa or anything these days to justify the cost for Sega.
Werewolf2000adSuckers, I know exactly what went wrong.Registered Userregular
Finally got around to trying Phantom Doctrine, an X-com style strategy game set in the espionage world of the 80's, after getting it in Humble Monthly and I'm enjoying it quite a lot. It was a bit intimidating to start with because it does rather slap you in the face with a whole bunch of interacting systems and tasks at once, but it didn't take long to get the hang of it. The agents you recruit have just the right amount of customization and background detail for you to get attached and start making up personalities for them.
Deadpan, Drumroll, Canasta and Durand have been my main team members so far. Deadpan is the main/player character, a former CIA agent (you can be KGB if you prefer). Canasta is a hard-bitten USMC vet. Drumroll is a Cantonese ex-Triad member I mainly use for infiltrating sites in disguise.
(Getting her a silencer was a godsend.)
I'm not usually much good at the combat in X-com style games, and I think one of the reasons I've taken to this one is that it encourages infiltration/stealthing your way around all the time - Open combat is very much treated as an "everything's gone to shit, just get out as soon as possible" situation. The reinforcements are endless, and your evac sites can be compromised if you take too long.
"Fuckin' Navy pricks."
You have to be careful not to leave bodies lying around in stealth, though - And if enemy agents notice that guards aren't reporting in, they'll start seeking you out whilst destroying any secret files they come across, which you collect in order to unlock extra items and missions via a fun side mini-game where you locate key words in documents and match them up to create big mad conspiracy boards full of pins and string.
Anyway, fun game, lots of atmosphere, recommended. Now I've got to go rescue someone who has vital information I need.
Nailbomb's new. I'm really not sure about her.
EVERYBODY WANTS TO SIT IN THE BIG CHAIR, MEG!
+21
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Zxerolfor the smaller pieces, my shovel wouldn't doso i took off my boot and used my shoeRegistered Userregular
I still need to track down a copy of Coast 2 Coast - I have OR2 on the original Xbox and Online Arcade (again before it was discontinued) on the Xbox 360. And I loved the first game from '86 too. A great series, but it does kind of need that Ferrari license. It does lose something when it has to use a generic Ferrari-ish (Ferrarish?) car instead. But it wouldn't surprise me if Ferrari wanted far too much now for what is a relatively niche type of racing game, it'll never be Gran Turismo or Forza or Assetto Corsa or anything these days to justify the cost for Sega.
I mean you only need exactly two Ferraris
Testarossa
and
Testarossa with no roof
Everything else is superfluous. C'mon can be that much ya smucks.
Phantom Doctorine got a fairly middling response when it released, I wonder if they've spent the last year or so polishing it up because it's getting a good reception in this thread now
I really need to get Phantom Doctrine installed and played one of these days (got it from Humble as I'm sure many here did). The basics of XCOM mission gameplay and customization but in an '80s espionage setting with disguises and silencers and shit, and a focus on stealth? And a mad conspiracy string board mini game to boot that I had no idea about?
I mean, come on. That's a crazy amount of boxes for one game to tick.
Werewolf2000adSuckers, I know exactly what went wrong.Registered Userregular
All I can say about Phantom Doctrine is that I'm enjoying it - Like I say, I'm not really a big X-Com person, not for want of trying. It's one of those genres I wish I was better at, you know?
I really need to get Phantom Doctrine installed and played one of these days (got it from Humble as I'm sure many here did). The basics of XCOM mission gameplay and customization but in an '80s espionage setting with disguises and silencers and shit, and a focus on stealth? And a mad conspiracy string board mini game to boot that I had no idea about?
You can assign other agents to complete the conspiracy boards automatically over time for you, but why on Earth would you ever do that
Oh, and Daemon X Machina came out today - I fired it up to have a quick blast and check out the framerate.
No worries - The highest setting it offers you in the options is 200 fps.
The character creator isn't anywhere near as complex as, say, Code Veins, but it's got the same anime feel just right.
Second Long War attempt made it 8 hours compared to 40 minutes, and might still be doable. Lost one squad and one soldier along the way, Germany noped out of the council as soon as their panic hit the first bar for some reason. The only thing that makes me think I'm doomed is engineers. Only option I've been getting to pick them up has been launching satellites for council requests, but I need more engineers to build uplinks to do that. So I've got 39 scientists burning through research and 14 engineers with their thumbs up their butts.
All I can say about Phantom Doctrine is that I'm enjoying it - Like I say, I'm not really a big X-Com person, not for want of trying. It's one of those genres I wish I was better at, you know?
I'm not very good at them either. Never have been at strategy games of any flavor. But I still often enjoy them, and I did XCOM, to a point - enough that I've got it on multiple platforms and I'll certainly play something else of that ilk. And Phantom Doctrine's setting is one that really grabs my attention.
I still need to track down a copy of Coast 2 Coast - I have OR2 on the original Xbox and Online Arcade (again before it was discontinued) on the Xbox 360. And I loved the first game from '86 too. A great series, but it does kind of need that Ferrari license. It does lose something when it has to use a generic Ferrari-ish (Ferrarish?) car instead. But it wouldn't surprise me if Ferrari wanted far too much now for what is a relatively niche type of racing game, it'll never be Gran Turismo or Forza or Assetto Corsa or anything these days to justify the cost for Sega.
I mean you only need exactly two Ferraris
Testarossa
and
Testarossa with no roof
Everything else is superfluous. C'mon can be that much ya smucks.
Open top Testa is obviously the Out Run classic choice, but I did like a lot of the selection in Out Run 2. The game's era also seemed to coincide with the last Ferraris I really liked, as well as having some classics in there. Testarossa, Daytona, F40, F50, and 360 Spider, yes please. So many of their newer cars have left me completely cold.
IIRC, the devs were that special flavor of "We're not including women and/or minorities due to our false conceptions of historical accuracy. Now chug this health potion." toolbags.
EDIT: Specifically on people of colour, in this case.
Undead Scottsman on
+15
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Sir CarcassI have been shown the end of my worldRound Rock, TXRegistered Userregular
IIRC, the devs were that special flavor of "We're not including women and/or minorities due to our false conceptions of historical accuracy. Now chug this health potion." toolbags.
The game has several notable women, including one that saves the main character's life, twice IIRC, has a DLC where you play as a woman, and it takes place in 1400's Bohemia. What kind of minorities are you looking for?
IIRC, the devs were that special flavor of "We're not including women and/or minorities due to our false conceptions of historical accuracy. Now chug this health potion." toolbags.
The game has several notable women, including one that saves the main character's life, twice IIRC, has a DLC where you play as a woman, and it takes place in 1400's Bohemia. What kind of minorities are you looking for?
I said and/or because I couldn't specifically remember which one it was (there's been several developers who've used "historical accuracy" to justify a host of representation issues.) so that one's on me for just going on a hazy recollection instead of actually looking things up to refresh myself. Apparently I did not remember correctly after all.
Regarding it taking place in 1400's Bohemia
1. There were absolutely people of color in 1400's Bohemia (who aren't evil invaders). Travel was a thing even back then.
2. Again, they fall back on thier idea of "historical accuracy" to justify why it's okay the didn't include nonwhite people, and yet they let videogame trappings like magic health potions exist just fine. If you're already willing to work around the idea of historical accuracy for gameplay reasons, it makes it a little harder to swallow when you draw the line at including better representation.
Game developers should never use the term “historical accuracy” when describing their games. The moment you have combat in a game and someone isn’t disabled, dismembered, exhausted, or outright dead from a weapon renders your entire statement false.
Need a voice actor? Hire me at bengrayVO.com
Legends of Runeterra: MNCdover #moc
Switch ID: MNC Dover SW-1154-3107-1051 Steam ID Twitch Page
Game developers should never use the term “historical accuracy” when describing their games. The moment you have combat in a game and someone isn’t disabled, dismembered, exhausted, or outright dead from a weapon renders your entire statement false.
You're saying I can't strap chainsaws to my high heels and ride them like rollerskates in reality!?
Also sounds like I need to get Wolcen. Quick, somone order candles from me!
IIRC, the devs were that special flavor of "We're not including women and/or minorities due to our false conceptions of historical accuracy. Now chug this health potion." toolbags.
The game has several notable women, including one that saves the main character's life, twice IIRC, has a DLC where you play as a woman, and it takes place in 1400's Bohemia. What kind of minorities are you looking for?
I said and/or because I couldn't specifically remember which one it was (there's been several developers who've used "historical accuracy" to justify a host of representation issues.) so that one's on me for just going on a hazy recollection instead of actually looking things up to refresh myself. Apparently I did not remember correctly after all.
Regarding it taking place in 1400's Bohemia
1. There were absolutely people of color in 1400's Bohemia (who aren't evil invaders). Travel was a thing even back then.
2. Again, they fall back on thier idea of "historical accuracy" to justify why it's okay the didn't include nonwhite people, and yet they let videogame trappings like magic health potions exist just fine. If you're already willing to work around the idea of historical accuracy for gameplay reasons, it makes it a little harder to swallow when you draw the line at including better representation.
Hell, it's especially true in Bohemia. Seriously, this is not some backwater province in the HRE or something, this is goddamn Bohemia. The capital of Bohemia was like New York City at the time, it was a huge center of culture and commerce, people came there from everywhere, so even if you're way in the sticks, not running into the occasional merchant from like Turkey and north Africa is honestly kind of silly, and the silly becomes glaring when the author is touting his historical accuracy.
FencingsaxIt is difficult to get a man to understand, when his salary depends upon his not understandingGNU Terry PratchettRegistered Userregular
I enjoyed what I played of Phantom Doctrine, but worried it would get more XCOMy later. should get back in if it stays nonopen combat. (I am bad at XCOM as well)
Game developers should never use the term “historical accuracy” when describing their games. The moment you have combat in a game and someone isn’t disabled, dismembered, exhausted, or outright dead from a weapon renders your entire statement false.
Remember Genji? Giant enemy crab. Attack the weak point for massive damage.
Granted, that was a different game. But it became meme-worthy for a reason. If you're going to tout historical accuracy as a selling point...
Per Wiki:
The "Giant Enemy Crab" meme originated during the demonstration of Genji: Days of the Blade at the Sony E3 2006 press conference. The producer Bill Ritch claimed that Genji 2's epic battles were based on "famous battles which actually took place in ancient Japan." Approximately two minutes after this was spoken, the gameplay footage showed a boss battle against, in his own words, a "giant enemy crab." Popular memes originating from the Genji demonstration included the game features described such as "you attack its weak point for massive damage" and "real-time... weapon change," despite neither of these being at all new to video gaming, being staples of classic 1980s games such as Metroid.
IIRC, the devs were that special flavor of "We're not including women and/or minorities due to our false conceptions of historical accuracy. Now chug this health potion." toolbags.
The game has several notable women, including one that saves the main character's life, twice IIRC, has a DLC where you play as a woman, and it takes place in 1400's Bohemia. What kind of minorities are you looking for?
I said and/or because I couldn't specifically remember which one it was (there's been several developers who've used "historical accuracy" to justify a host of representation issues.) so that one's on me for just going on a hazy recollection instead of actually looking things up to refresh myself. Apparently I did not remember correctly after all.
Regarding it taking place in 1400's Bohemia
1. There were absolutely people of color in 1400's Bohemia (who aren't evil invaders). Travel was a thing even back then.
2. Again, they fall back on thier idea of "historical accuracy" to justify why it's okay the didn't include nonwhite people, and yet they let videogame trappings like magic health potions exist just fine. If you're already willing to work around the idea of historical accuracy for gameplay reasons, it makes it a little harder to swallow when you draw the line at including better representation.
Hell, it's especially true in Bohemia. Seriously, this is not some backwater province in the HRE or something, this is goddamn Bohemia. The capital of Bohemia was like New York City at the time, it was a huge center of culture and commerce, people came there from everywhere, so even if you're way in the sticks, not running into the occasional merchant from like Turkey and north Africa is honestly kind of silly, and the silly becomes glaring when the author is touting his historical accuracy.
Warhorse Studio's owner is an ass but I feel I should point out that the game takes places quite away from the capitol of Bohemia. The major town in the game is Rattay. Prague has a population of over 1.3 million people today. Rattay had a population of under 550 people in 2017. Sasau, another big town in the game, has a population of about 3700 people today centuries after the game is set. This is far in the backwater of Bohemia and how out in the boonies and disconnected from the goings on in the rest of the kingdom the main characters are comes up in quests and dialogue during the game (there's also some background dialogue from NPCs that have been to larger cities talking about how mind blowing it was to see an African so there's a bit of acknowledgement that the kingdom isn't all white people).
I've posted essays about how much I love Wei Shen from Sleeping Dogs because he's the first time I've seen the experience of an Asian-American man and how it's different from being a native Asian in Asia depicted in a game and have spelled out that part of why Johnny Gat in Saints Row is loved by part of the fanbase despite being a shallow character is that seeing a Korean-American depicted as such a badass is otherwise unheard of and I can fully believe that the part of Bohemia depicted in Kingdom Come would be bereft of people of color. If Prague was compared to 1800s Washington D.C., then Rattay would be Boyds or Hagerstown's non-slave population at the time.
Ultimately I see Kingdom Come as part of a small trend where small developers not from the US or England want to tell very specific stories related to their cultures in games. These often aren't going to be games with the most diverse casts. I'm pretty sure Detention and Devotion don't feature native Taiwanese from the population that lived there before the mass exodus of Chinese that settled in Taiwan after the civil war. These games aren't going to speak to or for everyone and that's fine and thankfully most head developers aren't as much of an ass about that as Warhorse's.
Edit: Also, the game is seriously disjointed and janky anyway. I think a lot of people have higher expectations because it looks so damn pretty at times that it's not apparent that it's still way more indie game than AAA. I think of it as the type of game only me and @Elvenshae could love in terms of mechanics.
Metro exodus didn’t really feel like an open world game for me, it’s still pretty linear in a good way, the open areas just provide more ways to approach some missions. But for the most part it’s still heavily story based. Was one of my favourite games of last year, felt like a spiritual successor to Half-life 2 more than stalker
Also playing Darksiders Genesis and I suddenly realised why most arpgs don’t have platforming and jumping puzzles. Because fixed camera angles make them akin to war crimes
Posts
Steam | XBL
Indie roguelike dungeon crawler game that's been been on my wishlist for a long time.
Thanks Karoz!
Note this is an Ubi key just FYI
Kalypso Bundle, up to 10 games for $5 --- note only games I really have played and recommend are Dungegons 2 and Tropico 3
https://youtu.be/2ENPYp9h8SM
Look at the evil Slay the Spire has unleashed upon us
I think I remember hearing good things about Omerta.
Steam | XBL
Deadpan, Drumroll, Canasta and Durand have been my main team members so far. Deadpan is the main/player character, a former CIA agent (you can be KGB if you prefer). Canasta is a hard-bitten USMC vet. Drumroll is a Cantonese ex-Triad member I mainly use for infiltrating sites in disguise.
(Getting her a silencer was a godsend.)
I'm not usually much good at the combat in X-com style games, and I think one of the reasons I've taken to this one is that it encourages infiltration/stealthing your way around all the time - Open combat is very much treated as an "everything's gone to shit, just get out as soon as possible" situation. The reinforcements are endless, and your evac sites can be compromised if you take too long.
"Fuckin' Navy pricks."
You have to be careful not to leave bodies lying around in stealth, though - And if enemy agents notice that guards aren't reporting in, they'll start seeking you out whilst destroying any secret files they come across, which you collect in order to unlock extra items and missions via a fun side mini-game where you locate key words in documents and match them up to create big mad conspiracy boards full of pins and string.
Anyway, fun game, lots of atmosphere, recommended. Now I've got to go rescue someone who has vital information I need.
Nailbomb's new. I'm really not sure about her.
EVERYBODY WANTS TO SIT IN THE BIG CHAIR, MEG!
I mean you only need exactly two Ferraris
Testarossa
and
Testarossa with no roof
Everything else is superfluous. C'mon can be that much ya smucks.
I mean, come on. That's a crazy amount of boxes for one game to tick.
Steam | XBL
Wack a klansmen with a bat.
I own it, need to get back in.
There is a demo
http://www.fallout3nexus.com/downloads/file.php?id=16534
You can assign other agents to complete the conspiracy boards automatically over time for you, but why on Earth would you ever do that
Oh, and Daemon X Machina came out today - I fired it up to have a quick blast and check out the framerate.
No worries - The highest setting it offers you in the options is 200 fps.
The character creator isn't anywhere near as complex as, say, Code Veins, but it's got the same anime feel just right.
EVERYBODY WANTS TO SIT IN THE BIG CHAIR, MEG!
I'm not very good at them either. Never have been at strategy games of any flavor. But I still often enjoy them, and I did XCOM, to a point - enough that I've got it on multiple platforms and I'll certainly play something else of that ilk. And Phantom Doctrine's setting is one that really grabs my attention.
Open top Testa is obviously the Out Run classic choice, but I did like a lot of the selection in Out Run 2. The game's era also seemed to coincide with the last Ferraris I really liked, as well as having some classics in there. Testarossa, Daytona, F40, F50, and 360 Spider, yes please. So many of their newer cars have left me completely cold.
Steam | XBL
Since he's killing angels now.
Thanks!
Twitch: KoopahTroopah - Steam: Koopah
The kerfuffle is that its creator is a massive tool. As for the game itself, people generally like it.
So basically, getting it for free is the best case scenario. Good game without personally giving money to a goose!
EDIT: Specifically on people of colour, in this case.
The game has several notable women, including one that saves the main character's life, twice IIRC, has a DLC where you play as a woman, and it takes place in 1400's Bohemia. What kind of minorities are you looking for?
I said and/or because I couldn't specifically remember which one it was (there's been several developers who've used "historical accuracy" to justify a host of representation issues.) so that one's on me for just going on a hazy recollection instead of actually looking things up to refresh myself. Apparently I did not remember correctly after all.
Regarding it taking place in 1400's Bohemia
1. There were absolutely people of color in 1400's Bohemia (who aren't evil invaders). Travel was a thing even back then.
2. Again, they fall back on thier idea of "historical accuracy" to justify why it's okay the didn't include nonwhite people, and yet they let videogame trappings like magic health potions exist just fine. If you're already willing to work around the idea of historical accuracy for gameplay reasons, it makes it a little harder to swallow when you draw the line at including better representation.
Legends of Runeterra: MNCdover #moc
Switch ID: MNC Dover SW-1154-3107-1051
Steam ID
Twitch Page
You're saying I can't strap chainsaws to my high heels and ride them like rollerskates in reality!?
Also sounds like I need to get Wolcen. Quick, somone order candles from me!
Steam: https://steamcommunity.com/id/TheZombiePenguin
Stream: https://www.twitch.tv/thezombiepenguin/
Switch: 0293 6817 9891
Remember we live in a post Obama world because Jeri Ryan's then husband was a horny dirtbag
http://www.fallout3nexus.com/downloads/file.php?id=16534
You uh, you appear to be in the wrong thread
Steam: https://steamcommunity.com/id/TheZombiePenguin
Stream: https://www.twitch.tv/thezombiepenguin/
Switch: 0293 6817 9891
I wonder if the plot being stuffed to the gills with sometimes near-incomprehensible jargon is because of the anime or because of the sci-fi.
All these hardened, battle-scarred mercenaries really enjoying ice cream is probably an anime thing, though.
Hell, it's especially true in Bohemia. Seriously, this is not some backwater province in the HRE or something, this is goddamn Bohemia. The capital of Bohemia was like New York City at the time, it was a huge center of culture and commerce, people came there from everywhere, so even if you're way in the sticks, not running into the occasional merchant from like Turkey and north Africa is honestly kind of silly, and the silly becomes glaring when the author is touting his historical accuracy.
Remember Genji? Giant enemy crab. Attack the weak point for massive damage.
Granted, that was a different game. But it became meme-worthy for a reason. If you're going to tout historical accuracy as a selling point...
Per Wiki:
Steam | XBL
And he always needs healing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0zT-at719k
Yassss YAAAAAASSSSSS
Edit: The lip twitch at the end is perfection. Bravo to that actress.
Spintires Original game $2
Warhorse Studio's owner is an ass but I feel I should point out that the game takes places quite away from the capitol of Bohemia. The major town in the game is Rattay. Prague has a population of over 1.3 million people today. Rattay had a population of under 550 people in 2017. Sasau, another big town in the game, has a population of about 3700 people today centuries after the game is set. This is far in the backwater of Bohemia and how out in the boonies and disconnected from the goings on in the rest of the kingdom the main characters are comes up in quests and dialogue during the game (there's also some background dialogue from NPCs that have been to larger cities talking about how mind blowing it was to see an African so there's a bit of acknowledgement that the kingdom isn't all white people).
I've posted essays about how much I love Wei Shen from Sleeping Dogs because he's the first time I've seen the experience of an Asian-American man and how it's different from being a native Asian in Asia depicted in a game and have spelled out that part of why Johnny Gat in Saints Row is loved by part of the fanbase despite being a shallow character is that seeing a Korean-American depicted as such a badass is otherwise unheard of and I can fully believe that the part of Bohemia depicted in Kingdom Come would be bereft of people of color. If Prague was compared to 1800s Washington D.C., then Rattay would be Boyds or Hagerstown's non-slave population at the time.
Ultimately I see Kingdom Come as part of a small trend where small developers not from the US or England want to tell very specific stories related to their cultures in games. These often aren't going to be games with the most diverse casts. I'm pretty sure Detention and Devotion don't feature native Taiwanese from the population that lived there before the mass exodus of Chinese that settled in Taiwan after the civil war. These games aren't going to speak to or for everyone and that's fine and thankfully most head developers aren't as much of an ass about that as Warhorse's.
Edit: Also, the game is seriously disjointed and janky anyway. I think a lot of people have higher expectations because it looks so damn pretty at times that it's not apparent that it's still way more indie game than AAA. I think of it as the type of game only me and @Elvenshae could love in terms of mechanics.
Steam Profile
3DS: 3454-0268-5595 Battle.net: SteelAngel#1772
🖥️Steam Profile
How sure of that should we be?
Two quid fifty here. For the price of a coffee, even bullet sponges start to look tempting.
Steam | XBL
Realized I wasn't play Metro anymore, I was playing STALKER. Nice try, but I'm not falling for that!
Oh well, paid the right price. Still have some other Game Pass games to try yet before I cancel it.
Royce was always in the right thread.
We have always been at war with Eastasia.
Loyalty to Yuri
http://www.fallout3nexus.com/downloads/file.php?id=16534
Also playing Darksiders Genesis and I suddenly realised why most arpgs don’t have platforming and jumping puzzles. Because fixed camera angles make them akin to war crimes