Sometimes I even set the difficulty to Easy to really chill.
Memes
Rules:
- Be civil and nice.
- Try not to excessively repost, as a rule of thumb, wait at least 2 months to do it if you have to.
Wait, you play games to have fun and not as a duty? What about "pride and accomplishment"? ;)
The moment I embraced easy mode was when Assassin's Creed Odyssey was like: "Is the gameplay we designed for our single player game too tedious? Then buy some legendary items with IRL money or maybe our XP cheat!"
I hate that games started designing around microtransactions. Like who thought "hey let's take the worst parts of MMOs and put them into single player". I loved AC origins and was so looking forward to odyssey and then I just bounced off it within a few hours because so much of it just felt like doing chores.
Extra bonus: Odyssey was supposed to feature a female lead, rather than the choice, but a misogynistic Ubisoft exec vetoed it, which I can only assume was reason for the absolutely garbage dialog.
And replay games I already know by heart. I can start a new game or....... play Starfox 64 again. "Do a barrel roll".
StarFox 64 is so perfect in that arcade-game way, where you can technically finish it in a sitting but it's so cool to figure out different paths and stuff. :D
"Okay guys, let's ROCK N' ROLL!"
In case you haven't seen it, this video might make you very happy.
That's nice too. I regularly opt for replaying super metroid.
10/10 setup. Only disappointment is that the PC is running Windows, and not GNU+Linux.
How do you know he doesn't have a dual boot
He'd have told you.
hes also calm instead of RAGING because windows has YET AGAIN overwritten his linux bootloader.
Don't care about achievements play games till like 70% then drop them. If it stops being fun I'm done, finishing a game is never a requirement don't have time for that
I got to like 98% in RDR2 before I realized the gambling ones were going to be a giant pain in the ass. At that point I was in too deep to give up. I watched all 3 Robocop movies in one sitting and still didn't complete the last blackjack one. Eventually got it but that was a frustrating experience.
Yeah, play the story and sidequests but don't do any of the collectibles that are often necessary for 100%.
Or play factorio... Look at the time, ah it hasn't changed, then an hour later notices the date incremented. Oh
Friends don't let friends play League of Legends
i have like 370 hours of factorio, and i've only really played it over the period of about. 4-5 months, though i've owned it for a year or two now.
Factorio is just one of those games. For anybody that likes open world sandbox games and technical stuff, you already own factorio, yell at me in the replies.
Ah the early times of factorio, learning everything for the first time. Those are long ago, 1700h+ now. The addiction is real.
What did they take from us? I haven't played an online game in years now.
I've been hmming and hawing in answering this. But I'm out for dinner and bored. So alot games original vision is to be a single player experience but then online features or an online overhaul is shoved by the aboves. IE SimCity was considered unplayable by thr online features, anthem was originally designed to be single player but was completely redone, etc etc.
Yeah I see that. I remember the disappointment of sim city.
It could be I don't follow games close enough to see what I'm missing. I find more SP games popping up in my feeds / friend recommendations than I could ever hope to play.
I definitely feel like mainstream AAA/AAAA and even iii to a certain extent have been progressively enshittified. But I've been at this a while, so I've seen how it's gone this way as more and more money got brought to bare on games.
The moment someone who wasn't involved in actually making some part of the game was expecting a fat return on investment was the moment the wheel of shit started to turn.
Please recommend me your favourite story games. This is me and I'm in need of a good 'book.' :)
Edit: I'm going to tell you all to play Night in the Woods. Now, it is set in my home region and felt like a game made for me, but I think it has messages anyone could relate to.
Disco Elysium
The only run I haven't done is the fascist run because I cannot be a dick to Kim.
Bastion will make you feel like you're reading a book. It's one of my all-time favorites, by the developers now best known for Hades.
"Proper story's s'posed to start at the beginning..."
"Kid just rages for awhile."
That game is still fantastic.
I absolutely adored a low budget game called Firewatch. It’s first person and your only contact with another human is through a radio. You’re running away from your life and work for a summer in a fire watch tower in a national park.
The story is nice and the characters are interesting and flawed and relatable.
Buy it on sale and have a fun evening or two with it.
Spiritfarer, To the Moon, Gris (no words in this one but still a good story imo), anything SuperGiant has ever made with my favorite being Transistor.
Oh sweet nobody's mentioned it yet! One of my personal favorite "book-feeling games" is an FPS series.
Linear, tightly focused, and feels like a novel because it's based on one:
Metro: 2033 and Metro: Last Light. (Haven't played Exodus yet)
You play a young fella named Artyom. Living in formerly-Russia's metro tunnels with other survivors after a nuclear apocalypse devastates the surface.
Your settlement comes under threat from seemingly psychic creatures called "the Dark Ones", and you're sent on a quest to go get help.
Across the way is a bit of a "coming of age" adventure. You run across really interesting and well-acted characters, sneak past hostile factions, contend with scary (and diversely behaviored) mutants, and risk dangerous excursions on the surface. This is a dark world where gasmask filters are precious and bullets are literally currency, but somehow it's still beautiful and fascinating.
(That intro guitar melody will stay with me forever.)
Like any good hero, Artyom finds himself in one bad situation after another, and along the way if you pick up on the hints, may even come to understand the world around him and the role he plays in it.
There's a morality system that's more subtle than "be boyscout or be a villain", and "ranger difficulty" is an amazing way to play because it makes gunfights feel tense and realistic.
You can only take a few hits in this mode, but unlike in most games, so can your enemies! It makes things feel much less "bullet spongey."
Everyone begged for an "open world" experience and we got Exodus which is supposed to be awesome, but something will always stay close to me about this post apocalypse story that takes you on a focused, well paced, and at times emotional ride to save a transformed world.
And that's just the first title mostly.
You won't be running between towns for hours or making rubber bands and glue into machineguns. You'll still feel like you're surviving, but know exactly where you're supposed to be going.
They go for super cheap on GoG and Steam all the time. Well worth the experience. :)
Tales of Vesperia. I like the combat system most, but the story's pretty good, and there's a lot of optional content.
The Blackwell series, West of Loathing, Talos Principle II, To The Moon series.
Seconding the Blackwell series, with a caveat. The earlier games can be a little rough around the edges, resulting in a few Guide Dang It! moments. Walkthroughs are your friends.
Sea of Stars.
I'm listening to the soundtrack right now and it's awesome. The story is decent and the graphics and design are top notch. It was so captivating that I pretty much didn't play anything else while I was working through the game.
In Stars and Time is especially appropriate for Pride Month!
Disco Elysium is phenomenal as well.
Indie games are absolutely killing it these days, I love em. In Stars and Time, Animal Well, Bomb Rush Cyberfunk, so many are fantastic.
$3000 setup just to play a game from 2010
Modding. And you can play others with it too.
fuck MOBAs
My absolutely most favorite single player and gaming experiences in general are:
- Outer Wilds
- Tunic
Their replayability is 0 but man do these experiences stay with you. I still think about outer wilds daily and i finished it last year.
Also a word of caution:
Both these games function with knowledge-based progression, so almost everything you look up about these games can be considered a spoiler and will lessen your experience with them!
I bought outer wilds a while ago but haven't played it yet, I should probably give it a try
The rage-inducing MOBA’s what? Real cliffhanger at the end of this meme.
I also hate that the grammatical standard for all cap pluralization is to include an apostrophe. What is it the Oakland A's possess!?
It’s not the standard tho. Every style guide says this is an error it with the optional exception of single-character capital letters …such as Oakland A’s.
I read this in Steve Austin’s voice
I'm happy with a 17" laptop, though I'm having to use a usb keyboard. Also playing a game from 2015, Rebel Galaxy. Nothing really stands out, but it's interesting enough for my tastes.
Doctor, it hurts when I do this.
And here I am raging because dead by daylight absolutely sucks.
I have all that and then I don't play my games from 2010 for some reason