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Everything posted by Humanoid
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Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim - Thread #2
Humanoid replied to IcyDeadPeople's topic in Computer and Console
Might be just you given how generally reviled the Thieves' Guild part of the game is - probably the most disliked writing of the game in general for a lot of folks. That said, I did enjoy it enough to say it's probably the most enjoyment out of a Bethesda-developed game that I've had, and although I didn't have the desire to finish it in the end, I can comfortably say it was worth the money. -
The perfect set-up, but I just, just can't bring myself to do it.
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Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim - Thread #2
Humanoid replied to IcyDeadPeople's topic in Computer and Console
I think in the official timeline the island of Morrowind is destroyed? Doing a post-apocalyptic Morrowind setting might infringe on their other main title. -
I've no fondness for superhero games, or indeed superheroes in general, so it'd take something special. Maybe a Walking Dead-esque choose-your-own-adventure with 60s Spiderman cartoon graphics, or a 'thinking' 2D platformer like Flashback.
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My only real complaint about Alpha Centauri is the colour palette: red, blue, with sprinkles of occasional green. I could describe it as being somewhat visually oppressive, which although thematically appropriate in an alien new world, just wasn't particularly fun to look at. On the other hand, it had more personality than a lot of RPGs, and some of the best voice work ever - apparently all the VAs were asked to use their natural accents (which makes it doubly sad that Firaxis dropped the ball with the XCOM voicework). Oh, the other complaint would be supply crawlers, ugh.
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I had the PC version in glorious 4-colour CGA. I didn't know what it was called or how it played given I'd have been under 5 years old at the time (so gameplay would have consisted of mashing the keyboard until something happened onscreen). By the time I grew up it had disappeared, and it was just a thing in the back of my memory until I recognised what it was years and years later reading an article about 80s DOS games. That, along with Pole Position and Tetris, are my earliest memories of video gaming in any form I think. I also remember that to start the PC, I had to enter the magical input t-enter-t-enter. It was only years later that I realised that it was just set up with a user name of 't' and a password of 't'. Yeah....
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In a way, it was good that with the initial release, the custom race option was greyed out for difficulties below average, as it meant that I would learn the game playing a range of different traits, instead of the 'optimal' ones - creative plus aquatic/subterranean (and broadly any +population one) padded out with good starter planet bonuses. By the time I had access the patch, I'd be at least used to a few different styles. That said, I never really got far beyond settling in as an average level player. Mostly I'd attribute this to late-game tedium in terms of colony improvements, which I'd comfortably call MoO2's weakest point: I'd end up clicking semi-randomly at the endless list of similar improvements since none had any particularly defining characteristics. This +production building or that +production building. Eh. For the same reason, I basically never went above average sized galaxies, and indeed preferred small ones.
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My answer is that I don't. That is, not in any special way. I enjoy certain RPGs in the way I enjoy certain strategy games or certain adventure games. The only genres I tend to dislike outright are first person shooters and real time strategy, aside from that an RPG has as much chance as anything else. That wasn't always the case. The traditional core of RPGs, the hacking, the slashing, the loot, the levelling - none of it has been of any particular appeal personally. When someone brings up "old-school RPG" as a term of endearment, I'd probably nod politely and change the subject. Just to pick on recent titles, The Legend of Grimrock, for example, had RPG traditionalists cheering in glee, but for me, it was just a throwback to the dozens of games I'd ignored previously. Likewise the ill-fated Hall/Braithwaite Kickstarter. Before Black Isle, the only RPG series I could claim to like was Ultima. That's not really an answer, but I guess it's because I can't give any particularly profound reasons. I like the good RPGs because they're good games.
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I think launching a new funding drive so soon after their last one before showing any end product would result in some pretty justifiable scepticism from a sizable proportion of potential backers. I imagine they'd be content with self-funded preliminary work for the time being.
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Ouch, $48 shipping. I know these things are heavy, but still. The Glorantha setting Kickstarter only asks $20 for what it's worth.
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I can't help but wonder if BG1 is actually the best way to get into the IE games nowadays. It's a game I have no particular love for, which colours my opinion, but I personally consider the value of the game to be the way it changed the direction of the genre and less how the game holds up today. Like the pebble that sets off the ripples then sinks, it made a splash but feels best enjoyed today via its successors instead.
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I've never finished Theme Hospital as such, too chaotic for someone too obsessive about neatness and organisation at the end with monster epidemics and vomit tsunamis - it's a bit too overwhelming to be fun for me personally so I tend to just stay at the mid-level hospitals and choose not to advance when the option comes up. My sister on the other hand loves the challenge and has gone through the game multiple times. I ought to hand in my strategy gamer badge...
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Yep, indeed it's easier.
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In a year where I only bought three new release games - XCOM at a canter. Not an enduring classic by any stretch but a game that's chomped my time like no other since Civ4. Bear in mind I've played MMOs in the interim. Runners-up by pure virtue of my having purchased them are Dishonored and ME3, but misleadingly so because I've only played the former for about an hour thus far (because XCOM) and the latter is a purchase I very much regret. The only new release game I still might buy before the end of the year is New Super Mario Bros Wii U, depending on whether I delay the console purchase to next year or not, but if I do, I expect it to come #2 on my list.
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In theory some games would be long enough such that their purchase would be cheaper than the gigabytes of Youtube data would cost you.
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I bought CK2 as well, my only purchase so far (and given that the sale ends today, the only purchase altogether) from Steam out of this sale. Not particularly looking for a strategy game but eh, why not. I do own a couple previous Paradox games, but I've never actually played any games by them.
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The Sims is a series I would love if only the sims themselves were fully autonomous and didn't require handholding, along the lines of the other Sim-games. Unfortunately, even at the highest 'free will' setting, while they'll do the basic things like eating and going to work, they'll ignore that broken sink while it sprays water all over the house (except for complaining about it every few minutes before merrily ignoring it again). On UK game pricing, yeah it's awesome, but unfortunately Amazon won't ship games to Australia. There are a number of alternatives, but none are perfect: Zavvi/The Hut offer free shipping and frequent discount codes, but don't remove the VAT component of the prices. DVD.co.uk remove the VAT, but charge shipping (1.39GBP) for every single item with no discounts for bulk orders. 365games (via their localised site) offer pricing in Australian dollars, but are usually a bit dearer than the other two. None have any choice over shipping carrier, all use Royal Mail, which is fine for me, but unlike Amazon it means you can't have expedited and/or tracked delivery.
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[Razer] Razer Synapse 2.0 Used For Always-On Data Mining
Humanoid replied to matthewfarmery's topic in Computer and Console
Yeah, curse those mouse drivers eating up all my conventional memory. If someone passed you a floppy disk with a generic mouse driver that took up one less kilobyte than the one you were using, that was worth its weight in gold! Still, at least it wasn't as hungry as MSCDEX.EXE. :D Ahem. Personally I uninstalled all my Logitech software once I stopped needing the remap facility for MMOs and just let Windows handlle it as a generic mouse. -
[Razer] Razer Synapse 2.0 Used For Always-On Data Mining
Humanoid replied to matthewfarmery's topic in Computer and Console
There's the G400 and G500 which are both current models and the same basic shape as the MX518, yeah. I don't really pay attention to things like mouse 'performance' because I don't play anything where it matters: I prefer the utility of the revolution scrollwheels in the non-gaming mice (using an MX1100 at the moment), I'm addicted to that wheel. It's disappointing that they still haven't added that wheel to their trackball products: I use trackballs on both my laptop and my HTPC and it's hard to adapt to life without it. That said, I've heard that some people have had issues with how the G500's sensor works and prefer the simpler G400. I have a couple of the latter if only because they were dirt cheap, one I use at work and the other has been left unopened on my shelf for the past year - I only bought the second one to get my order past a free shipping threshold.... -
Ahh, shopping, the one thing I'm really jealous with Americans about. Put together an example build using Newegg: Antec P280 Black Super Mid Tower Computer Case $109.99 SeaSonic X750 Gold 750W ATX12V V2.3/EPS 12V V2.91 SLI Ready 80 PLUS GOLD Certified Full Modular Active PFC Power Supply $99.99 Intel Core i5-3570K Ivy Bridge 3.4GHz (3.8GHz Turbo) LGA 1155 77W Quad-Core Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics 4000 BX80637I53570K $219.99 + Newegg Promotional Gift Card - $20.00 ASUS P8Z77-V LE LGA 1155 Intel Z77 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard ($20.00 Mail-in Rebate Card) $134.99 GeIL EVO Leggara Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866 (PC3 14900) Desktop Memory Model GEL38GB1866C9DC $42.99 SAMSUNG 830 Series MZ-7PC256B/WW 2.5" 256GB SATA III MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) $199.99 Western Digital Red WD20EFRX 2TB IntelliPower SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive -Bare Drive $129.99 SAPPHIRE 100352-2L Radeon HD 7950 3GB 384-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16 HDCP Ready CrossFireX Support Video Card ($20.00 Mail-in Rebate Card) $299.99 + AMD Gift - 4-in-1 Game Coupon (free Far Cry 3, Hitman Absolution, Sleeping Dogs, discount on MoH:Warfighter) Comes to $1,237.92 so I overshot the budget a little, but that's before $40 worth of mail-in rebates and $20 free gift voucher. No OS specified, if you need to cut back on the budget I suggest downgrading either of the storage solution. Also no optical drive since that's trivial to scavenge from your old box.
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$1200 buys a lot nowadays if all you need is the box. Keeping track of drivers isn't really an issue as modern OSes work well enough with the drivers they ship with to at least allow you to download the latest versions - bearing in mind a lot of it is unnecessary bloatware anyway - if you can get around to building it, you can end up with a much more balanced system complete with goodies such as a big SSD and high-end graphics (nothing linked in this thread so far boasts acceptable graphics for the budget).
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What are you playing now - the plays the thing
Humanoid replied to LadyCrimson's topic in Computer and Console
Saw it reported that the non-US basic Wii U bundles bafflingly don't include a sensor bar. All other bundles, including the basic one inthe US, come with it. The huh? On the other hand, only Europe gets the ZombiU bundle. Weird stuff. -
What are you playing now - the plays the thing
Humanoid replied to LadyCrimson's topic in Computer and Console
Mostly it's just retuned the difficulty curve, the early game fights are significantly easier now while there's not much difference later in the game. No idea about alchemy however. -
At the price I got it, even one playthrough is me robbing them blind Though I also buy games purely based on artistic merit, when I decide that their visual approach etc stands out. Not a GoG game, but if you haven't tried it, you may want to try the Steam demo of 'Trine' Very much a GOG game now, it's right there in the sale.
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Hero-U Kickstarter: Quest For Glory spiritual successor
Humanoid replied to Hurlshort's topic in Computer and Console
Every time she's asked she rules out ever going back into gaming though. Though if Williams and Jim Walls (Police Quest) return, that'd complete the suite of Sierra adventure alumni... What I fear most is that Derek Smart will try to get in on the Kickstarter action. OhgodIwishIhadn'thadsaidthat.
