Friday, 26 June 2009
Overlord 2
I've played a couple of hours of Overlord 2, so far it's like the first one only tighter, prettier and much funnier. I haven't come across as many amusing moral choices and it's slightly harder to kill innocent people this time round but none the less, it's damn good fun.
Thursday, 25 June 2009
Mass Effect has pissed me off
Anyhoo, I’ve been struggling through. The combat is balls but some of the bits are fairly entertaining – mainly the fun character bits. Having said that, I’ve just given up on it. Why? Because I couldn’t get a girl to shag me.
Part of the hype behind Mass Effect was you could cultivate relationships between characters and this is probably the best bit of the game. The problem arises when you don’t go down the beaten track. The first time round, I had my eye on someone, I forget who but because I was playing a girl and I didn’t tell Kaiden to fuck off at any point, the game decided I clearly wanted to ride him like a bitch from hell. This annoyed me and I had to start again, making the person I wanted to fuck extremely clear from the outset.
I should point out, by the way, that I am not in the least interested in seeing the grainy CGI sex scene. It’s just that the character arc is incomplete for the NPC’s if the relationship I’ve been cultivating for most of the game doesn’t go anywhere. It’s really annoying when films, for example, drop an unresolved character half way through and never bring them back. I was struggling with that sort of frustration.
So anyway, this time I was playing as a girl and I wanted to shag Ashley Wiliams. Why? Well because fucking the Asari is far too easy – the woman comes on so hard it’s like having sex with a stalker. I got Kaiden killed because he’s just a little bit too boring. Garrus, Tali and Wrex are out for species reasons.
It was with great surprise that I discovered – during the scene where my two characters usually meet and confess their love for each other – nothing. Not a sausage. Poor choice of words there. The game just skipped straight on to the next bit of story – which is landing on Ilos if anyone cares.
This *really* annoys me. The entire fucking game is about cultivating relationships and it doesn’t even let you do that properly. I forgave its rubbish combat, dodgy plot, lack of any interesting sub plots and so on because the character development system was brilliant. It seems that I had been playing the exact way Bioware wanted me to and as soon as I wanted to do something SLIGHTLY UNUSUAL, that was it.
Reh.
The second one had better be an improvement.
Terminator Salvation
So two of our heroes are escaping the terminators when they are ambushed by a fifty foot tall giant terminator with a laser gun. At this point I actually thought some idiot had switched a reel with one from Transformers but apparently not. The characters perform some fairly entertaining escape manoeuvres and get away from the giant transformer. The giant transformer then opens two hatches on its’ legs and reveals two terminators on motor bikes.
It gets worse.
One of these terminators is taken down by liberal use of an oil slick, which is okay. The other is taken down by a wrecking ball on the back of a truck. Then a Hunter Killer – the flying terminators we know so well from the first three films – appears. It takes out a bridge ahead of the truck, which pulls a handbrake turn to stop. The chain, still dragging the terminator bike, whips round and slams into the Hunter Killer, blowing it up.
I haven’t seen anything quite that ridiculous since I last watched the Power Puff Girls. And that has a certain amount of self referential humour to it.
T4 is awful, really awful. The action scenes are nothing but extremely over the top cartoon sequences, like the ones I just described. The characterisation ranges from standard to hilarious. I lost count of the number of times someone yelled “NOOOOOOOOOOOO!” Several times it happened as the characters held their hands to the sky.
The script is... Well half of it is quite interesting – the stuff we saw in the trailer with the Terminator who thinks he’s human. That’s fairly entertaining but then there’s a load of utter rubbish involving John Conner and a secret plan to destroy the terminator base. It’s one of those plots where a lot gets said and discussed and yet nothing actually happens.
T4 has so many problems – even ignoring the characters, the acting and the action. The score is terrible (it’s a Danny Elfman one, which gives you quite a nice idea of how bad it is) the plot doesn’t really make much sense, there are too many loose ends, the terminators are nowhere near as dangerous as they should be and they appear to have made John Connor into a total dick.
It’s not as bad as Star Trek and Indiana Jones 4 – there are a couple of characters that I liked – but it’s really, really bad. Save yourself the time and money.
Overlord
Chris Livingstone has been waxing lyrical about the Overlord 2 demo. I’ve always been aware that Overlord existed in a faint way. I seem to remember Rhiana Pratchett reviewed it for PC Zone, which may be a bit unfair because I believe she helped write it. Anyway, if Livingstone likes it, the chances are that I will so I thought I’d try out Overlord as Overlord 2 isn’t out for a few months.
Oh boy.
Overlord is a weird hybrid of Action RPG and RTS. You play an evil emperor who has upgradable armour, spells, health and so on but you’re not exactly Altair in the combat stakes. For that you have your minions. You start off with five basic minions and you acquire more as you go on. I had thirty five minions of various types running around after me by the time I had finished and I’m sure I could have picked up more if I’d been paying attention.
Overlord’s big selling point was its knowing attitude towards high fantasy. I hate High Fantasy, I think it’s a dead genre that no-one has done anything decent with for years. Overlord takes the tired clichés that litter every example of the genre that I can think of and gleefully subverts them. You spend the first act gleefully clubbing hobbits to death, then move up to Elves, Dwarves and everything in between.
The game plays constantly with the nature of evil. There aren’t really any “good” options in the game. You are, for example, tasked with rescuing a supply of food for a nearby village. To do this, you work your way through a hobbit village, slaughtering everything you encounter. Once you find the food store, you can either keep it for yourself or return it to the village. Oddly, returning it to the village is the more evil thing to do as it keeps the villagers alive so you can enslave them more effectively.
Having said that, these choices are almost all cosmetic. Once you’ve decided to be evil or really evil, nothing really affects your progress. Characters attitudes towards you change (often hilariously) but you’re never presented with extra manna or anything, as far as I could tell.
I’m not sure that this is a bad thing, however. Moral choices, as Daniel Floyd pointed out, are never actual choices in games because they always reward one choice more than the other, thus negating the morality and making it more about economics. Here, you don’t gain anything by helping the villagers other than their thanks and you don’t really gain anything from stealing their food. It’s just fucking hilarious.
Overlord’s main plot is.... pretty reasonable and there are more than enough brilliant side quests to keep you entertained. The moral choice aspect makes keeps things interesting as well. I’ll definitely be playing it through again so I can see how things would have turned out if, for example, I’d abandoned my loyal wife for a goth girl I came across in a dungeon somewhere.
As far as the main quests go... there are a few very grindy ones. There are no objective markers so often it’s not entirely clear where the hell you’re supposed to be going. I spent half an hour wandering around a Dwarf Village before working out that I was supposed to enter a prison cell I’d opened to allow the game to progress. These moments are rare, but they’re bloody annoying when they do happen.
What does make up for the grind are the fun ways you can solve some quests. For example, I was charged with killing some feral unicorns by some elves because the unicorns were preventing them from worshiping at a sacred tree in the middle of a grove. I was a little short on minions at the time and so rather than charge in and risk death, I set fire to the meadow which burned up the unicorns as well as the sacred tree. The Elves cried. It was fantastic.
What else is there to say? Well the controls work very well (on PC at least, I’m told they’re quite badly broken on the consoles. Har har.) There’s a good amount of content so It’s good value for money... The graphics aren’t that good and I came across a couple of bugs here and there but overall, I’d definitely recommend it. Check out the demo on Steam.
Friday, 12 June 2009
Prototype
For those who don't know, Prototype is an open world game that follows a young man who has had a genetic experiment performed on him and now he... mutates a lot. or something. He can run up walls, absorb people into himself, he's practically invincible, can superjump etc. etc. etc.
I found it really hard to get into this game. Part of the reason behind this is the total lack of plot. You're never really given an explanation as to who the main character is, who the company who've infected him are, why the hell we should care about his sister and so on.
The writing is incredibly lazy. For example, when your character breaks out, he is treated to the sight of the scientists who were supposed to be performing an autopsy on him being gunned down by soldiers working for the company. Why do they do this? Well, no reason that's evident. It's just a very quick and cliched way of getting across that the company are EVIL. As if doing genetic experiments on live human subjects didn't make that point clearly enough.
Problem number two with this game is the AI. Every cop and soldier in the game is looking out for you but you can disguise yourself as a civilian. This means that the AI has been programmed to ignore all but the most blatant signs of supernatural goings on. This boils down to you can jump across cars, superjump into the air and land right in front of a cop, shattering the cobblestones, and he'll just gaze at you. I punched a civilian once, several dozen other civilians saw me but a cop was looking the other way. The cop instantly ran over and looked at the civilians' corpse, ignoring me completely. Apparently me standing on top of the civilians body and several other people cowering at my feet pleading for me not to kill them wasn't a big enough clue for this flatfoot.
So apart from the AI and the plot is this game any good? I'm not sure. There's free running, which is okay, some faintly entertaining combat stuff. There's still far too much pointless running around and I'm not sure if I can be bothered to commit the sort of time to this game that seems to be demanded.
I will be playing a little bit more but after the first few hours of play, my impressions really aren't very good.
Wednesday, 10 June 2009
Left 4 Dead 2 update
So, internet:
1) I told you so
2) Stop moaning about it
3) check out this gameplay video, it's going to be fucking AWESOME.
Although that gameplay vid does demonstrate quite nicely the main problem with console controls. They're so jerky, there's no fluidity, no subtlety.
Smug smug smug.
Grin.
Sleep.
Songs what I have been listenining to recentlyz
Normally I don't like Iron Maiden because they're one of those bands than encourage people obsessed with 80's hair metal to claim that no modern metal can match it. This is utter bullshit but anyway....
Fear of the Dark is a fantastic song. It's a lot shorter than most 80's metal songs (seven minutes, rather than the more usual nine) and it has a real progression to it. It also builds and builds in the way, for example, Telegraph Road does.
It's not fantastic by any means but it is a very good example of a genre which has been rather unfairly tainted by Aerosmith and the like.
2) 99 Red Baloons by Goldfinger
Now, as a musical purist, it does annoy me slightly to not hear this song in the original German. Particularly as I'm told the lyrics are completely different in English. Having said that, this song does beat the original in one all important way: It uses guitars instead of synth.
There is something for a trend at the moment for punk bands redoing 80's "classics". Orange did it with Karma Chameleon and their version is quite definitely better than the original.
Previously, I'd always assumed cover versions were attempts to grab quick publicity like Madonna's butchered version of American Pie. These versions are suitably obscure that they won't offend the people who legitimately love the original versions, though.
I love 99 Red Balloons for two reasons: Firstly, it is a lot faster than the original which makes it feel like it's got more energy than the original every had. Secondly, he slips into German for the third verse. This is awesome, and seems to increase the energy of the song even further
3) Jyosei Kashimashi Monogatari by Morning Musume
This one is going to be a hard sell.
Okay, so it's J-Pop, which isn't the most respected of genres (for good reason) but there are a few things I like about this one song.
1) The video is quite charming, in a really odd way.
2) It's *really* catchy
3) They do the same dance Mona does in Wario Ware: Smooth Moves
4) Most of the girls are quite hot. Which I admit has nothing to do with the music at all.
5) It's got a *lot* of energy in it. If this came on in a club, if suitable amounts of alcohol had been consumed, the dance floor would probably collapse from overly energetic dancing.
So yeah. I got recommended this, by the way. I didn't go out of my way to try and find it.
Stop judging me.
Stop it.
4) That's What You Get by Paramore
Sorry, I couldn't find a studio version of that song.
I love this song mainly because of Rock Band - I've been playing a drum campaign through on expert and this is one of the only songs I can get all the way through. The drum line is really fun to play.
Taken on its own merits, though, it's a surprisingly charming song. The singer is charismatic and it's rocky without going into actual metal territory.
5) Dirty Little Secret - The All American Rejects
Now, normally I shouldn't like the All American Rejects because they're generally a little bit emo for my liking. This is one song though that transcends its emo roots.
One reason for this is the video - which contains Post Secrets. Anyone not familiar with that project, head over to their website right now. It's incredibly touching to see these secrets for you to see in a high budget mainstream music video. It also means there's a genuine reason for the Emo - rather than generic whining which a lot of the genre tends to fall foul of.
Secondly, there's the drum line, which is a lot of fun to play. Sorry, I'll stop getting my recommendations from Rock Band one of these days.
Then there's the guitar line which is really, really damn simple but very catchy. Listen to it a few times and you'll be humming it all day.
So that's it, pretty much. I've got to go to my Ju Jitsu class now but I should say one thing before I go.
Seriously, why are the RIAA trying to close down torrent sites? I found all the songs I was after bar one studio version withing a few seconds on Youtube, one of the biggest sites on the internet.
But you can't keep those songs, you tell me.
Yes, you fucking can. Insert the word "kiss" before any youtube URL so www.youtube.com/whatever becomes www.kissyoutube.com/whatever and BINGO. A downloadable version for you.
A gift from me to you :)
Mass Effect
1) Packing
2) Agonising about whether job interviews went well.
3) Agonising about whether I'm going to be able to get any more job interviews.
And pretty much anything is better than any of those three activities. I say pretty much anything. They're still better than Resident Evil 5.
Anyhoo, it is better than I remember it.
Last time I tried to play it through, I got stuck on the first level. It wasn't too difficult or anything, it's just that I would always get to the bit where you have to disarm the bombs and I'd completely lose interest. As far as first levels go, I think it's actually worse than the one from KOTOR 2, which had my previous WORST LEVEL EVARRR award.
So anyway, I zipped through the opening level whilst chatting to my girlfriend, and actually found myself having fun running around in the citadel... Things only improved when I got to Novera - the level with the giant ant creatures. The combat was more fun than I remembered and the Biotic powers were turning out to be useful - although no-where near as useful as force lightning.
Then I got to Feros - the level where the plant creature takes over all the civilians and I remembered why I really didn't like this game the first time round.
Some of the levels are pretty good. A lot of them are *total* shit. The plant creature planet is all rubbish, as is the level where you're blowing up the Krogan Geophage factory thing.
What saddens me slightly is Bioware have clearly spent a lot of time placing hidden events in the game for the more dedicated players to find. I really, really wish, though, they'd made the main levels - the ones everyone was going to play - actually fun.
But the characters are well realised - much better and more likable than the ones in KOTOR 1, Jade Empire or Fallout 3 (which I know wasn't developed by Bioware but it's the only other RPG that came out recently that I can think of) the plot is... okay and there are a lot of things to do with yourself.
I just hope the sequel follows through on the strengths and hones the gameplay.
Friday, 5 June 2009
Wii games I am looking forward to
Sadly, for about the last nine months we have had absolutely nothing out that actually interested me. Sure, Madworld looks okay but I'm sure the novelty would ware off after half an hour or so.
The good news is there are some real games coming up that look fantastic. I'm going to list them.
By the way, this isn't a list of good games... for the Wii. It's a list of good games. The difference between them is...
Well. Super Mario Galaxy, Super Smash Brothers, Wii Sports, Zack & Wiki, Trauma Centre: Second Opinion, Wario Ware: Smooth Moves - these were all good games.
Bully, No More Heroes, Red Steel - they were more like games you'd completely ignore if they were on any other system but as they were on the Wii and fuck all else was out, they were given more credence. Zelda games get this treatment all the time.
Anyway, here are games that will (hopefully) be genuinely good in 2009/2010:
1) Feel
Or whatever it's called these days.
Feel is a "haunted house simulator" done by the guys who made the film The Grudge. Feel appears to follow the films atmosphere quite closely - which, for those who don't know, is typical J-Horror fare. Shit scary, lots of girls with long black hair.
Good points:
Well, for a start, look at the trailer - it looks absolutely fucking terrifying.
The motion controls also look like they make sense.
Bad points:
It'll have next to no replay value - not that you'd want to replay it. Too scary.
2) Red Steel 2
Red steel was the game that made me decide to get a Wii in the first place, or rather this trailer was.
Red Steel 1 wasn't exactly a bad game but the sword controls really weren't very good. Hopefully with Motion Plus we'll be able to have some proper ones.
Good points:
Well, the atmosphere has completely changed. They're going for a cell shaded Trigun like atmosphere this time round, which looks fucking cool.
The sword play should be... better. I'm still sure it won't be like real swordfighting (I used to do Kendo. Which, to be honest, is nothing like real sword fighting either) but as long as it's fun...
Bad points:
Nothing that I can see... but we haven't had any actual gameplay footage so it's hard to tell. Best to wait for the reviews really.
3) Super Mario Galaxy 2
Super Mario Galaxy is still one of the most awesome games for the Wii... it's astonishing how Nintendo have taken a platform game and made it... fun.
This second version looks like more of the same but more awesome experimental bits.
Good Points:
Lots of great concepts all ready on show.
The music still thrills
Yoshi
Bad Points:
Honestly? None. This game is going to be fantastic and only the needlessly cynical will deny this.
4) The Conduit
I've been pretty excited about this one for a while - mainly because unlike EVERY other console shooter, they let you properly adjust the way the game lets you aim... they said during the developer vids that they were hoping to attract some PC shooter fans and... well, that's me.
Good Points:
The weapons look good
The levels look pretty interesting
Overall, it looks pretty damn original.
Bad Points:
We still know very little about the plot or... you know. The actual game.
Shooters on the Wii have a history of being disappointing. Hopefully this will change that but we shall see.
5) No More Heroes 2
I feel a little odd saying I'm looking forward to No More Heroes 2 given that I really didn't like the first one. Look at that damn trailer, though, just look at it. The game looks fucking hilarious.
Good Points:
Funny
Original
Bad Points:
It may keep the really shit open world lite feel of the original
It may be another fucking grind machine
So there you go, five games on the Wii that I am genuinely looking forward to.
It may not seem like much, by my current list of PC games I'm looking forward to consists of...
of...
Well, Left 4 Dead 2 should be good.
Er...
Left 4 Dead 2 Boycott
A lot of people are really, really fucking unhappy.
I'm not, I have to say. I'm not one of those people who thought Left 4 Dead was an incomplete game. As far as time spent playing it goes, I've spent over 57 hours playing Left 4 Dead so far. That's considerably more time than I've spent playing Call of Duty 4, Crysis, Dark Athena or any of the other excellent games I've paid full price for. So there's really no question over whether I've gotten my moneys worth out of this game.
Moreover, I think the sequel has some really awesome stuff in it. The melee weapons are okay and the new characters are interesting enough - I'm more excited by the changing levels, AI Director 2 and the new gauntlet runs though.
The big difference is- Left 4 Dead 2 looks like a different game. They appear to have dropped the horror atmosphere entirely which is... a questionable decision but it separates the games fairly nicely. But whatever, I thought I'd go through the criticisms one by one, see if I can come round to the detractors point of view.
I'll use the bullet points as set out by the users on the steam forum.
- Significant content for L4D1 was promised, and never delivered
Plus, I think Left 4 Dead had enough content to justify the £25 asking price so this one's down to opinion, I suppose.
- Valve put little faith in L4D1 since they almost certainly started working on L4D2 right after release
I think this particular complaint assumes that everyone has been playing Left 4 Dead going: "you know what, this is shit. I can't enjoy it until we have two more campaigns."
- The fact that L4D2 is nearly identical to L4D1 will decimate the community for both games
- The announced date is not nearly enough time to polish content or make significant gameplay changes
- The new character designs seem bland and unappealing so far
1) No-one actually knows anything about the characters yet, so let's hold off on judgement there for a while.
2) I thought Francis was going to be the most boring character of all the L4D guys (because he was the most stereotypical), and then he turned out to be one of my favourites. So lets see what Valve do with them before we yell too much, eh?
- L4D2 is too colourful to fit in with L4D1's visual aesthetic
- The fiddle-based horde music is extremely disliked, though the differently orchestrated music is otherwise welcome
- L4D2's release will result in a drop in quality and frequency for L4D1 content, even compared to before
1) Drop in quality
Fuck off, this is Valve we're talking about.
2) Drop in frequency
Hm. Hm hm hm hm hm. If you were absolutely set on DLC, I can see how this would be annoying. I take the view that we're getting a completely new game and meh, it'll be £25. Fuck it, I've had my fun playing with L4D. Anything extra we get is a bonus.
- The community has lost faith in Valve's former reputation for commitment to their games post-release
The thing about that is...
What is the function of DLC?
Well, to people like Ubisoft and the guys who make Rock Band, it's a way to make money. This is fine.
For Valve, it seems to be a way to keep people playing games they would otherwise have stopped. This is why they've been releasing stuff for TF2, people started to stop playing it so they were brought back in with unlocks & other fun stuff.
Left 4 Dead, as far as I can tell, is still being rampantly played by loads of people. Shit loads. It's hard to get a handle on how many servers there are but I've never had trouble finding a decent server to play on. From that point of view, it's far more important for us to have DLC in TF2 than it is in L4D.
Getting back to the point, though, the "community" are fickle bastards. They had a hissy fit when the 360 got the survival pack eight hours before the PC did. The community will get the fuck over themselves when L4D 2 is released and it turns out to be great fun.
So yeah, that's what I think. I would like to think this will chivvy Valve along into making some extra content for L4D 1, just to shut people up cos I like extra content as much as the next guy. I won't join in the crucifixion if they don't, though.
EDIT:
I've been having a little run around on the forums and if you know where to look, the sensible users are bitch slapping the moaners in no short order. Doesn't stop the 6k users who signed up to this idiotic boycott making a lot of noise though.
I did find one really good comment, which I shall post here. In a response to a threat blaming the consoles' memory space for the sequel (where the trolls thought it should be free DLC) he said:
"Umm, actually its because the L4D team had so many ideas for L4D, that when it got down to it, it was enough new content to warrant making it a new game. 4 new characters and all of their speech, back stories, interactions, ect, 5 new campaigns, each longer than the ones in L4D, with accompanying versus and survival maps, a new game mode, 3 new SI, and at least one new UCI, 20 new items, including at least 4 melee weapons and incendiary ammo, as well as an updated director which can affect weather and map layout. If you think about it, a lot of this would be unbalanced, awkward, or impossible to put into the original game without a lot of work, and probably causing a lot of issues. Also, its a lot of time and resources spent by Valve, and while they do enjoy giving us stuff for free, they do have families and need to eat as well. Also, this provides even more of a chance to pull more people into the game. That's the real reason, but sure, this could have been a factor as well."
Since you put it like that...
:)
Monday, 1 June 2009
Taken
So what's Taken like?
Well the fight scenes are good. To someone who's studied Ju Jitsu for two and a half years, they're a little showy at points but it's a film, that's what they're there for.
The espionage bits are also quite nice. Liam Neeson makes quite a good spy.
So if you're just after a film that kicks a fair bit of arse, go nuts, this film is for you.
For the rest of us, things aren't quite right, sadly.
Things go wrong from day one where Liam Neeson's Daughter has a birthday party at her step father's house. I say house, it's a mansion. She gets given a horse. A cunting horse. If the script writer thought this would make her a sympathetic character, they were wrong. When this girl gets kidnapped, it's more amusing than anything else. Imagine the headline:
"Spoiled bitch gets kidnapped. Everyone else in the world finds this faintly amusing."
Liam Neeson is hard to sympathise with as well. He's an ex-CIA spook who doesn't want his daughter to go to France, because it's dangerous. It's France. It's a hell of a lot less dangerous than America, for Bob's sake... No handguns, for a start.
Well, I say there are no handguns. Paris in this film appears to be playing Paris as seen through the eyes of an American. Every security officer that Liam encounters has a pistol at least, some have MP5's... I'm sure some French security have fire arms but I know they're not exactly fond of them over there.
The problem with the film, from a purely racial point of view, is that when Liam won't let his daughter go to France, because it's dangerous, and she does, and she does get kidnapped, the film is basically saying "Don't go to Europe, there be dragons".
I know this is kind of symptomatic of Bush era America but I expected more from a film directed by a french man and part written by Luc Besson.
Having said that, the other writer of Taken also wrote Kiss Of The Dragon, which is a considerably more sensible take on the City Of Culture. Maybe he had been watching Top Gun or something when he wrote this.
I feel like I'm taking the mild xenophobia a little too seriously, here. The problem is, that was the main feeling I got left behind with at the end of the film. Probably because there's not really much else there... The plot is... okay, the acting is... okay but there's no real suspense. Things just happen one after the other, a bit like in the first and second Harry Potter films.
It's not a bad film, by the way, it's just no-where near as good as War or Kiss Of The Dragon or any of the dozen other films that follow a very similar structure.