- Joined
- Oct 6, 2016
Got the Castlevania advance collection on my switch mostly on a whim, started on Circle of the Moon and I’m baffled as to why running was an upgrade I needed to pick up but other than that it’s pretty good.
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You hit the nail on the head. Blue Shift is a nice side story, but Opposing Force, while it has some cool ideas, feels really bloated and padded, especially towards the end (fuck that munitions dump level).
Speaking of Half-Life, while Half-Life 2 was groundbreaking when it was first released, it hasn't aged terribly well in some respects. The vehicle sections go on for a little bit too long, especially that stupid dune buggy thing. Also, the enemy variety is basically nonexistent. For way too much of the game, you're just fighting the same Combine soldiers over and over, with the occasional diversion into headcrab land. My biggest issue, though, is that the weapons are terrible. The pistol and SMG are basically useless once you get the magnum and the pulse rifle, and there's no great long-range weapon except the crossbow, which is way too slow when you're in a firefight. I really wish the pulse rifle didn't have such insane spread.
I played and beat Half-Life: Blue Shift and Half-Life: Opposing Force back-to-back recently. Blue Shift is a great title and stands tall alongside the original Half-Life, crummy platforming sections and all. Playing as Barney with smaller munitions was a fun way to reuse the Black Mesa complex as an environment without it feeling like a cash-in. It's shorter than the original HL but I think it's just as long as it needs to be, fleshing out the world without retreading old ground.
Opposing Force on the other hand I did not like. The problem is the game is too long with too few interesting sections. I dug through some of the old promotional materials and one of them hailed "more weapons" as a selling point. I think that sums up Gearbox's take on Half-Life, because the glut of weapons in OF is ridiculous even in the middle of an alien invasion. You're going to need them though because many enemies can take multiple rockets to the face even on normal. Overall it feels poorly balanced. I've never liked any Gearbox game, they're just not that good, and even when they're taking 90% of their assets and gameplay from Valve they still manage to make something low quality.
Should've went with GOG. It's cheaper too.I tried playing Jade Empire on the PC, but the version on Steam was basically broken for me. I didn't have the crashes some other people had, but it was really choppy.
I got my hands on the Sonic 1-4 DS compilation a couple of years back and was horribly disappointed as I had never played Sonic 1 and only played Sonic 4 (Sonic and Knuckles) once as a rental when I was growing up.The dialogue in Clock Tower 2 (I'm sorry but the SNES Clock Tower has a special place in my heart and I can never refer to The Struggle Within as CT2 because I hate it) is Resident Evil levels of cheesy but once those segments are out of the way the game actually does a good job at being scary.
After being thoroughly disappointed by replaying Sonic Adventure 2 I decided to look into my library and play a Sonic game I'd yet to touch. Sonic 2 washed all the bitterness away and put a big smile on my face when I was done. I still prefer Sonic CD, but Sonic 2 is a damn fine followup!
All I know about The Conduit is that a post about it inspired this meme:
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So anyway, I was playing Final Fantasy V a bit earlier in the month. Made it to a part where the party gets thrown in the pokey and they meet Cid, who gets them out.
So far, it's okay. Kind of boring. The job system really ties the game together, though it's very simple so far. It's been fun to throttle through battles with everyone as unarmed berzerkers with Brawl. I don't know if I'll ever complete it.
When did the attitude change to it being a masterpiece? In the past it was seen more as a meh game.Final Fantasy 5 suffers from the huge fucking hype it has as "The Lost Masterwork" of Final Fantasy games. In truth, it's obscenely silly, the final boss is a fucking TREE projecting a hologram of a scary knight, and quite frankly the only reason I can think of for it being treated as a "masterpiece" is the fact that it's infinitely easier than Final Fantasy 3, meaning you can mess around with the Job system without panicking about being killed by FF3's murderers row of monsters.
Are there still people playing this online, or did you do all this against bots?Played battlefield Vietnam for the first time this weekend after having played BF 1942 & the expansions as a kid and BF2 as a teen, I never even knew about BF Vietnam's existence until semi-recently.
Downloaded it because I was itching for an oldschool shooter I could just turn my brain off for.
Does it hold up? No ofcourse not, it's very obvious that this was semi-rushed out after the success of 1942 & its expansions, however there are enough improvements over that game for it to feel fresh enough.
It really feels like it was a stop-gap production between 1942 & BF2. Some of the new mechanics as well as the further development of the helicopter (first tested in the "secret weapons of WW2" expansion of 1942), retrospectively seem quite ahead of their time, since the game was reliant on the multiplayer aspect.
Mechanics like lowering a rope from choppers to make embarking easier as well as homing MANPADS on the VC side (even though they are pretty much worthless against anything but helicopters) feel pretty immersive for something so dated.
Vehicle variety is great, with 2 different jets and 3 different helicopters for each side as well as new weapon mechanics such as deployable mortars. Flying still feels the same as 1942 which a lot of people didn't like, but for me it was always the best part.
It's pretty fun.
All in all, I can recommend if you're looking for something mindless to play away at while listening to an audiobook or something.
IIRC there's tiny communities still online, particularly for BF2 & BF2 mods such as project reality, but it's almost all organised via third party services such as teamspeak or discord if I remember right.Are there still people playing this online, or did you do all this against bots?
Its status as this legendary lost masterwork is sillier than ever when you consider it had that reputation from only having a seven year gap between its original release and the official translation. That‘s like if a game from 2015 got localized today. Then again, games are way different today than they were decades ago, and FF5's well known to be the first major fan translation out there that encompassed such a big game, and did it well.Final Fantasy 5 suffers from the huge fucking hype it has as "The Lost Masterwork" of Final Fantasy games. In truth, it's obscenely silly, the final boss is a fucking TREE projecting a hologram of a scary knight, and quite frankly the only reason I can think of for it being treated as a "masterpiece" is the fact that it's infinitely easier than Final Fantasy 3, meaning you can mess around with the Job system without panicking about being killed by FF3's murderers row of monsters.
Going to have to disagree here. I think FF5 has actually aged the best out of the SNES final fantasy games, or at least of the 3, it's the one I'm most likely to go back to. I admit I'm mostly just a sucker for the job system, but the only final fantasy game that did it better than 5 was 11. And yes, the story is silly, but I liked that the game wasn't trying to take itself too seriously. I also just find 4 and 6 to be pretty dull experiences. With 4, the fake-out deaths are annoying and the game is just way to easy. With 6, the ensemble cast doesn't give each character enough screentime, and I don't really care for Kefka as a villian.aged poorly, and the story feels more like a cartoon for kids.
Fun fact: in the original release you couldn't quit a race and restart straight away. You had to finish a hopeless race, then drive all the way back to the start each time.Finally got around to playing Burnout Paradise this year via the Switch port. Loving it so far, haven't completed too many of the races yet, I'm having fun just exploring the map and crashing into the other cars. It's a good way to unwind after a long day by just crashing into things. It has a great soundtrack too, I was surprised to see how many licensed songs it has.
In the US, it was always considered a lost masterpiece in the 90s, amplified when major magazines started going into the lore of the Final Fantasy franchise and talking about how FF5 was a brilliant game and we got fucked over because Square thought Americans were morons that wouldn't be able to handle the Job system.When did the attitude change to it being a masterpiece? In the past it was seen more as a meh game.
Omitting the ending in a review of this game should be a criminal offence. Allow me to fix it:Limbo of the Lost
Lets say this one is really bizzare. Pretty much everything in this one is stolen from internet. So game is weird mix of assets from all genres there generic fantasy next to scifi stuff. Also mix of ideas you have segment where you are detective investigating murder mystery. Next level you are repairing some sci-fi power station, and after that you fight fourt horsemen of appocalypse.
Story is about sea captain who was lost in bermuda triangle and is trapped in limbo. Your objective is to escape .