As may already be apparent, my game-playing in recent times has become fractured and fragmentary. I play something every day but what and for how long depends almost entirely on factors not wholly within my control. It's weird and annoying.
Factors affecting my "choices" include but are not limited to
- Dog-related interruptions and demands.
- Changing climactic conditions inside and outside the house.
- Work.
- Television programs to be watched at time of broadcast.
- Cloud gaming queues.
- Scheduled testing slots.
- Inertia, laziness and mithering.
For a few weeks now it's been a rare day when I've been able to sit down at the time of my choice, in the place of my choice, with the device of my choice and play the game of my choice for as long as I choose. I can't remember any point in the entirety of my gaming life, which goes back to the very early 1980s, when I had this little control. It's ironic, considering I am now semi-retired with ostensibly fewer responsibilities or commitments than at any time since I left college.
I only mention it to explain why it's so hard to find any through-line in what I post here any more. Of course, that's assuming there ever was one...
As I say, though, I am still playing games. Quite a few, in fact. The selection I'm mostly choosing from at the moment includes
- Cloudpunk
- Wuthering Waves
- Divinity: Original Sin
- Solasta: Crown of the Magister
- The First Descendant
That seems like more than enough to be flipping between but missing from that list only because I have not, as yet, gotten around to making it possible for me to play them on the laptop are
- EverQuest II
- Once Human
- Nightingale
Those three theoretically remain in my "Currently Playing" pile, a designation flawed only in that I'm not currently playing any of them.
Astute readers will notice the absence of a couple of titles I supposedly was playing
- The Outer Worlds
- Hard West
I'll refrain from listing all the games I've bought recently but not yet played at all or those I've signed up for or am thinking about. I probably need to play some games before I add any more to the heap.
On the positive side, I did finish something! Granted, it was only a demo but still. When I posted about Hard West, an anonymous reader left a comment recommending I try Mutant Year Zero. So I did. The demo, anyway.
And I liked it. The setting is interesting, the characters are appealing, the graphics are attractive and the gameplay is involving. When I finished the demo my immediate response was to go to the Steam Store to buy the full game. It was on sale at the time, although I forget what the discount was.
I didn't end up buying it, for two reasons. The most sensible was that, as I think I've made clear, I already have way too many games going unplayed to start adding more. MYZ isn't going anywhere so it makes much more sense to wait and buy it when I might actually play it.
The real reason I didn't pull the trigger right away, though, was the reviews. I read a bunch of them and they were mostly very complimentary. The game has an all-time Very Positive rating on Steam. Many of the reviews, however, make a point of saying how challenging and difficult the game gets in later stages and how important stealth becomes.
I am not really in the market for anything "challenging" right now, if indeed I ever was, and I have never enjoyed stealth mechanics all that much, so that put me off somewhat. All of which goes to prove that, yes, reviews can make a difference to purchasing decisions.
Nevertheless, chances are high that I will pick up the game at some point, most likely in a sale. I have it on my wishlist. Thanks again to the anonymous recommender.
As for the games I have been playing, I have a few notes:
Cloudpunk is really good. The story is really draws you in, helped enormously by the way it's told. It would work as a TV show or a movie but for once playing the game is adding to rather than detracting from the narrative experience.
Things have opened out somewhat from the endless fetch quest architectonics of the early game and there have been some unexpected twists. Camus gets more and more delightful as does Rania's relationship with him. I'm loving the whole thing.
Divinity: Original Sin, though? Not loving that so much. All the same, I'm playing quite a lot of it, mostly because so far it's the only game I have set up to play directly on the laptop without using some sort of remote streaming. That means it's my default choice far too often just because it's less of a faff to log in. I need to do something about that.
Interestingly, when I visited Can You Run It? to see what games would run on the laptop, I checked D:OS and apparently it won't. The laptop doesn't meet the minimum specs. Weird, then, how it runs smoothly at high settings for entire sessions, with the laptop showing absolutely no sign of strain. I used to trust that site but I'll look at the results there a lot more skeptically in future.
As for the game itself... it's a bit wordy, isn't it? I mean, I count myself as someone who's willing to undertake a good deal of reading (Or listening.) when playing video games. I generally like to give myself the full quest text/voice acting experience. But even I'm finding this one a bit much. It's all talk. If I play for an hour I'm lucky to get five minutes of combat - and I have to go looking for even that much.
It wouldn't be so much of a problem if the writing was great. It's not. It's good, as in competent, grammatically correct, appropriate and all those professional kind of things so many games fail at but it isn't really doing much for me. The jokes aren't very funny, the characters aren't very characterful and the plot isn't very compelling. I'd rather it had less polish and more heart.
Solasta: Crown of the Magister, by comparison, is less professional in just about every possible way but also way more fun. The plot is much more linear but that means I know what I'm doing every time I log in, something that absolutely cannot be said for Divinity: Original Sin. I need to get Solasta onto the external drive asap so I can play it instead.
The First Descendant, as Tyler Edwards suggests, is a lot more fun than it has any right to be. It's the video game equivalent of one of those dumb action movies your friend drags you along to see and you think you're going to hate but you end up having a really good time even though you don't want to admit it.
I'd be playing it more if it wasn't that the queues on GeForceNow are pretty chunky in prime time. I dropped out of the line twice yesterday evening because it was taking too long and I lost patience but then I tried again in bed and got in almost immediately. Bad omen.
I played for an hour and spent my free token on Sharen before the event ends today just in case the option goes away. (I wanted Freyna but she wasn't in the offer.) Then I did two missions in a group to get the parts to make the Bunny costume. I had no idea what I was doing of course. I just followed one of the other players and shot stuff and we beat both missions and no-one yelled at me so op success!
There was some issue with the Bunny rewards. One I got, the other I didn't, which I suspect might be because my inventory was full (Don't say a word...) or maybe it was the wrong mission. I think there's a machine you can go to to get stuff from missions you didn't pick up so I'll have to check that next time.
It's a fun game, anyway, if insanely over-complicated on the back end. I will be playing more.
Once Human I also want to get back to at some point. It's going to need a post of its own soon, for one thing. They're making even more peculiar changes to the Season system, which is now so ludicrously convoluted I can't imagine most players have a clue what's going on. I know I don't.
I would have picked a new scenario but there's not much chance of me playing until I'm back on the desktop full time. I will try to make time to go through the process though, so I can at least attempt to describe it, if only so I understand it myself.
EverQuest II is another game I really want to get back to playing. It might run natively on the laptop, too. I need to get it onto the external drive to find out.
I haven't really touched the new expansion, which just feels wrong. I saw the 2025 Roadmap and as usual it's a case of get on the bus or get left behind. I don't want to get left behind but I do wonder if my days as even a semi-regular player may be coming to an end. If I'm honest, I just like modern games better than old ones now. I enjoy the old games when I play them but when I'm thinking about playing I mostly want to play the new.
Speaking of which, I absolutely am going to get back to Wuthering Waves very soon, not least because Naithin says the new content has raised the bar on storytelling in the game and I already thought it was pretty darn good. I have to finish the Black Shores to get to Riniscita so I'd better get on with it.
And that's where I am right now in regards to gaming. I suppose this almost counts as one of those "My Gaming Plans" posts that I keep reading on other blogs but never do myself. Maybe I need to start. Winging it doesn't doesn't seem to be working quite as well as it used to.
"Inertia, laziness and mithering." Name three things that stop me from blogging :P
ReplyDeleteI hate buying games and not playing them (hello, Dragon Age : Veilguard) which is not a huge surprise considering I didn't finish the LAST Dragon Age. But I am still in love with the first... reviews were good (and I realize reviews aren't reviewing for post 50's gamers, these days.)
Point being, I also have Amazon Prime (so many free games, and many good ones) and Epic Game store (so many free games, and many good ones). But I get miffed when I spend $60 on a game and hate it, while I get engaged in a 5 year old title given to me by some platform. Meh, I'll get over it.
I like chores, and do my Fortnite daily chores, and my Marvel Rivals daily chores... and that's about it right now. Aside from the odd early access Hades 2 run to build on the story / progression or Deep Rock Galactic : Survivor.
I'm also in Star's Reach Alpha, curious about Pantheon (I still spend swathes of chunks of time in p1999, before shutting off completely for a month or year or more... It's an all in / all out game for me.)
See, instead of making a post on my own blog, I basically made one here! <3
Heh! I do that a lot but usually I spot it and turn it into an actual blog post before it goes too far.
DeleteI do wonder sometimes, often in fact, why anyone buys new games at all, considering the extremely wide availability of varied and highly satisfactory free options. In many cases you don't even have to go back to older games - there are some great free options (Or at least "free" with a low-cost subscription service.) for very new games too.
There seems to be a general feeling in the air that AAA games have had their day and while I doubt that's true in terms of those types of games being made, I suspect it may be of the pricing model they use. $60 may not pay for the production costs any more but I find it unlikely the market will stand a hike to whatever would be needed to make these games financially viable. Not as standard pricing, anyway.
I’m stealing and using the word mithering as often as I can fit it into a sentence. Atheren
ReplyDelete