You’d have thought that on the ice planet people would have realized that extreme cold causes things to freeze on the machinery, so maybe we should do something about that. Nope! Read more
Let’s Play Lost Planet 3: Part 4 – Gas Run
This time we’re retreading some old ground to get some new Thermal Energy.
Nintendo Power Retrospectives – Part 49
This week we start with the Best of the Rest of Nintendo Power’s fourth year, with the 6 NES titles that made the top 30 (or 20) but weren’t featured in the magazine. Read more
Where I Play: Lost Planet 3 – Part 3, When Extraordinary Repairs Become Commonplace
We’ve got a lot of stuff to fix on this planet.
Where I Play: Lost Planet 3 – Part 2, Ice Planet Repairman
This time I deal with all the crud that needs to be fixed on this planet.
Where I Play: Lost Planet 3 – Part 1, Dirty Snowball
I’m starting a new Let’s Play, as the Dragon Age II LP wasn’t really working for various reasons. I’m doing Lost Planet 3 because the game has a more conventional level structure, so it makes it easier to have more conventional chapter stops. Read more
Nintendo Power Retrospectives: Part 48
Nintendo Power Retrospectives – Part 47
Tabletop RPGs for Video Game Fans II
This time I’m revisiting a concept did a video on a few years ago – recommendations for Tabletop RPGs for people who play video games. Read more
Nintendo Power Retrospectives – Part 46
Nintendo Power Retrospectives – Part 45
This week we continue with Nintendo Power with issue #33 for January of 1992.
Video Game Review – Yoshi’s New Island
This week I’m doing a Vlog style review of Yoshi’s New Island (as, at present, I can’t capture gameplay footage from the 3DS). Read more
Nintendo Power Retrospectives – Part 44
This week we continue with Nintendo Power with issue #32 for Janurary of 1992. Read more
Concert Review: RePLAY – A Symphony of Heroes
Another vlog-style review. Last night (3/6/2015), I went to the performance of “RePLAY: A Symphony of Heroes” at the Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall. Here are my thoughts on the concert. Read more
Book Review – Console Wars by Blake J. Harris
This week I’m doing a sort of conceptual crossover between the Nintendo Power Retrospectives and Breaking It All Down, as I take a look at the book Console Wars, by Blake J. Harris
Buy the book at Amazon.com: http://amzn.to/1AbORyG
Vlog – The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies – And Also New Super Mario Bros. 2
This time I give my thoughts on the conclusion of Peter Jackson’s latest Tolkein Trilogy, as well as New Super Mario Bros. 2 for the 3DS.
Nintendo Power Retrospectives – Part 30
This week I’m taking a look at Nintendo Power Issue #20. Read more
Vlog – New Super Mario Bros. DS Review
This week I’m giving my thoughts on New Super Mario Bros. for the DS – which I couldn’t capture gameplay footage of, so I’m not making this a standard review.
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Vlog – CCP and the Closing of White Wolf
This week I’m giving my belated thoughts on the dissolution of White Wolf Games at the hands of CCP.
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Nintendo Power Retrospectives – Part 26
This week I’m taking a look at Nintendo Power #16, for September of 1990. Read more
Vlog – How To Identify A Bootleg GBA Cart (Without Using The Label) Cart aside from the label
This time, I take a look at a bootleg GBA Cart that I got ahold of recently, and show a few differences between this cart from other GBA carts, aside from the label, that you can use to let you know if you’re dealing with a bootleg.
A bunch of random thoughts related to discussion coming up around the closure of Irrational Games
What bugs me about people who rip into the stories of games which try to tell good, interesting stories but fail (at least in the eyes of the people doing the ripping), like, for example, Bioshock Infinite, is that the language used to mock the games often comes in the form of saying “Games can’t tell good stories, why should you try?”
Not that they’re saying games can’t be art – they know that games can be art, and often the people saying these things want more games to be art. However, dismissing the narrative of the Bioshock games as being too simplistic or too trite or playing with the players heartstrings too much is a bit like making fun of little league baseball players because they’re not hitting home runs like the pros. They may get there someday, they may not – but what good can mocking them for trying do?
If you really, really want better video game stories, then signal out the people who do what you want to see for praise, and if someone does something wrong, don’t just mock their decisions, talk about why it didn’t work for you.
I can’t code well enough to work on a AAA, but I can tell when a story works, and when it doesn’t and if it doesn’t work I can tell why. Hell, depending on why the story doesn’t work, I can tell you what it would take to fix it.
Shifting the topic somewhat – games like EVE Online and DayZ aren’t “fixing” game stories, or “telling” better game stories. People are using those games to tell interesting stories, sure, but describing them as the future of game storytelling (as I got the impression Patrick Klepek? was kind of alluding to in his discussion of the Irrational Games closure with Alex Navarro), is at best erroneous. EVE Online and DayZ aren’t telling game stories to or with players – they’re giving them handycams and a box of props. At best the cameras will get used to make some interesting stories, sure. However, the difference is that EVE Online and DayZ have the added “feature” of facilitating a kind of electronic “happy slapping” that games like Dragon Age, Bioshock, Final Fantasy, The Elder Scrolls or other more single player, narrative driven games can’t really do.
There’s certainly a place for Minecraft and DayZ, and I don’t begrudge the people who enjoy those games the fact that they like them. However, I really don’t want the future of video games to be more games like that.
One last thing – if Ken Levine’s plan is to make games like The Way Z with his smaller, leaner team, I find the fact that Shawn Elliot lost his job at Irrational Games because of this slightly ironic – at least to me. You see, back when Shawn was on the Games for Windows podcast, he liked to talk about how he enjoyed griefing people in video games. In particular, one incident that has permanently stuck out in my mind is one where he, and another host of the podcast discovered a Grand Theft Auto IV Multiplayer Role-Playing server.
Shawn and his friend found this example of emergent gameplay in a sandbox environment utterly hilarious, and decided to stomp all over everyone’s sandbox. They logged in, and went on a rampage until they were kicked. Then they posted on twitter about this, and got a whole bunch more people to go into the server and continue rampaging until, ultimately, the server was shut down. Mr. Elliot considered this a wonderful success. That even probably happened about 5-6 years ago, but I haven’t forgotten it, and it’s forever colored my impression of Mr. Elliot. And thus, while I feel bad for the other 184 other employees of Irrational Games who have lost their jobs because of the new creative direction that Ken Levine has decided to go in, I don’t feel bad for Shawn Elliot.
With Shawn Elliot, at least, the bully has gotten his just desserts.
Thoughts on 3DS & Wii U Games
This time I wrap up my thoughts on my new 3DS games, and discuss the potential for the Wii U as a system for console RPGs.
Three Nintendo 3DS Games
This time I’m taking a look at three games for the Nintendo 3DS – Theatrhythm Final Fantasy, Castlevania: Lords of Shadow – The Mirror of Fate, and Batman: Arkham Origins – Blackgate