Video Game Chat Thread - Pre-Alpha Experimental Version

Are videogames for children?


  • Łączna liczba głosujących
    8
  • Ankieta zamknięta .
What are Kiwi's thoughts of Control, Firebreak, and post-Alan Wake Remedy?

I found Alan Wake 1 to be fun but overrated and I could never get into Max Payne despite my best efforts. Then they want all in on culture war shit and I skipped everything after Alan Wake. A task made easier by the general consensus being they all sucked. For other reasons, I was looking into Control and FBC Firebreak and found that people supposedly like them now. How much of this is genuine, and how much is cope from the few remaining Remedy fans is hard to gauge.
 
What are Kiwi's thoughts of Control, Firebreak, and post-Alan Wake Remedy?

I found Alan Wake 1 to be fun but overrated and I could never get into Max Payne despite my best efforts. Then they want all in on culture war shit and I skipped everything after Alan Wake. A task made easier by the general consensus being they all sucked. For other reasons, I was looking into Control and FBC Firebreak and found that people supposedly like them now. How much of this is genuine, and how much is cope from the few remaining Remedy fans is hard to gauge.
I liked Control, but then I'll enjoy anything with X-Files-y vibes. I don't really remember there ever being a time that it wasn't well liked though?

FBC Firebreak will be dead sooner rather than later so I don't recommend sinking any time into it.
 
Anyone got recommendations for either dungeon crawlers(for a grimrock fan) or simpler/more laid back CRPGs(for a wasteland 3 fan, found myself bouncing off divinity OS 1 a couple of times but I could give it another try).
Do you mean turn based dungeon crawlers? DPRGs? Or more Eye of the Beholder like games? Gridders?

Experience puts out a ton of the former, it's kind of their genre nowadays (like how NIS America and Disgaea became "the" SRPG company for a while). Good ones from them include Savior of Sapphire Wings (a remake of a remake of a remake of a remake of their first game) which comes with several DLC expansions and stuff integrated (so it has a really beefy postgame) and is bundled with another good one by the same team, Stranger of Sword City (which has it's DLC expansion integrated).

Demon Gaze Extra is also a pretty good one, it's very anime but takes place in the same universe (the "Empty Epic" universe) at a different point in the timeline, and has slightly different mechanics.

(Price History: Of note, this is a match for the cheapest it's ever been.)
(Price History: Of note, it was 90% off a week ago and I wouldn't pay full price.)

Sapphire Wings is $15 right now and you get 2 games. Definitely a good buy. Sapphire and Stranger both use traditional Wizardry-like mechanics. The former is about the hero Xeth reincarnating after failing to save the world due to his autistic ass not realizing if you're not nice to your subordinates, they might not be willing to die as meat shields for the hero. The latter is (same timeline) a bunch of people from Japan being brought over to a post-apocalyptic fantasy world and left to figure out what the fuck; it's known for having insane difficulty including permadeath.

Demon Gaze is anime as fuck (it was funded by Kadokawa, the EA / Crunchyroll of Japan) but again, it's in the same universe, at a different point in the timeline. The big thing with Demon Gaze is that there are a bunch of demons (all cute girls in (and out of) various types cosplay) with a solar theme -- Mars, Venus, etc. The main character is a mysterious amnesiac who has the ability to stare at them, raise his eyebrows like the rock, and when they swoon from the "rizz" as the kids say now (the kids do not in fact say this now) he can control them, which unlocks things like the ability to open hidden doors or what have you.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
Wstecz
Top Na dole