Reply 1300 of 6852, by shamino
- Rank
- l33t
I've watched some videos of Gothic II and it's definitely impressive. It's another one of those games on the list that I ought to play sometime.
I was playing Rocket League on a relative's Switch recently, and decided to buy it for PC. It finished downloading and installing yesterday.
I'm amused to realize that I can now play newer games on Linux than I can with WIndows (I still use and prefer XP).
[edit: I'm also kind of bewildered by the "minimum" system requirements, which my linux box falls well short of. The game runs fine with my Core2 Duo E8400 and a GT430. Thanks only to youtube videos for showing how it actually runs on low spec hardware - the publisher apparently doesn't have a clue.]
Like many modern games, I find that half of my difficulty in Rocket League comes from figuring out the numerous controls and having the correct reflex to push the right button at the right time.
I've never really liked using modern Playstation/XBox-style thumbstick controllers, but that's clearly what the game expects you to have.
Since the default control scheme is totally wacky compared to the few other modern console driving games I've played, I did the modern gaming ritual of spending half an hour fiddling with changing them.
I think I now have a control scheme I can use semi-intuitively, but I still think the practical "analog" value of thumbsticks is dubious. They tend to just be on/off switches with a long throw.
I'd really like to try to get this game running on a Sega Genesis 6-button (really has 8 buttons) controller. But nobody designs modern games with the control options to make that convenient (they want a discrete button for everything, no combos). And it doesn't look like I can save multiple controller profiles.. so that's quite a deterrent against changing anything. Anyway, that's a battle for another day. For now I'm using a typical modern-style controller.
Getting a little better at the game, not getting frustrated at my own erroneous inputs quite as often.