VOGONS


What game are you playing now?

Topic actions

Reply 7040 of 7044, by newtmonkey

User metadata
Rank Oldbie
Rank
Oldbie

Warriors Orochi 4 ULTIMATE
I "finished" this just now... I put that is quotes because this is one of those games you can never really finish unless you want to spend hundreds of hours perfecting all the maps on the hardest difficulty level and reaching max level with maxed out unique weapons for all characters. If you absolutely love this game, you could probably play it regularly for years.

Unfortunately (maybe fortunately), I don't love Warriors Orochi 4. Don't get me wrong, I have been a fan of this series from back on the PS2, and rank Warriors Orochi 3 as one of my favorite games of all time. The problem with this one is that the game is way too easy, way too long, and way too repetitive. It also wastes your time; the game constantly forces you to sit there listening to characters talking to each other before your next mission starts. This would be annoying in a game with interesting characters and a good story, but it becomes infuriating here when the characters and story are so dull.

I don't mind an easy game (and of course I could have continued to turn the difficulty level up throughout the game), but labeling the default difficulty "normal" is absolutely ridiculous. You become effectively immortal just a a few hours into this long game, which makes the game feel more like busywork than playing a fun game.

I must say that it looks really good and runs surprisingly well even on very modest hardware. There's also lots of content if you are into the game; it took me just under 30 hours to complete the story mode on Normal difficulty level, and there are optional game modes I never even touched (including an annoying scavenger hunt you need to do in order to unlock the epilogue chapter).

It's not a good game. Do I regret spending 30 hours with it? Not really. Sometimes you want to play something brainless while watching shows or listening to podcasts. Warriors Orochi 4 is fine for that, but I'd recommed Warriors Orochi 3 over it any day; it's more interesting and more difficult.

Reply 7041 of 7044, by bakemono

User metadata
Rank Oldbie
Rank
Oldbie

Decided to play a bit of Master of Orion 2, which I had last played in '06 before swearing it off for being too much of a time waster. Works fine on a Pentium M laptop running XP. Weather is hot and my back hurts. Time to waste some time.

GBAJAM 2024 submission on itch: https://90soft90.itch.io/wreckage

Reply 7042 of 7044, by appiah4

User metadata
Rank l33t++
Rank
l33t++
Joseph_Joestar wrote on 2025-07-24, 20:22:
Playing Mass Effect for the first time on my Xbox 360. I skipped this game back in the day because it had some crappy online DRM […]
Show full quote

Playing Mass Effect for the first time on my Xbox 360. I skipped this game back in the day because it had some crappy online DRM on the PC, which I didn't want to deal with. Naturally, this isn't an issue with the 360 version, which works just fine without an internet connection.

First impressions are very good. Graphics look quite nice for that time, though character faces do occasionally veer into the "uncanny valley" territory. Performance is also a bit wobbly, with occasional stutters and screen tearing when traversing larger areas like the Citadel. From what I've read, this is just how it was on the 360, and seems to have been fixed in the second game. Voice acting is pretty good as well, with a great cast of characters, but the music is kinda hit and miss.

Gameplay wise, I'm not sure about the combat yet. Feels a bit clunky, though that might just be due to my party's currently low levels. I'm playing as the default soldier Shepard, with most points assigned to various combat skills, and a few in Charm for good measure. The quests and dialogue seem to be of standard BioWare quality, very reminiscent of KOTOR. I also like the lore of this setting. It was interesting enough that I actively wanted to find out more about the world, without being forced into it by a quest or something.

All in all, a very solid start. This game piqued my interest very quickly, and I'm looking forward to (eventually) going through the entire trilogy. From what I understand, you can import your save files into the next game, which gives me even more incentive to finish them all.

Mass Effect 1 has a very memorable final act and finale, it is the highlight of the series AFAIC. I also enjoyed 2, but never played 3 - maybe sometime in the future..

Reply 7043 of 7044, by Nexxen

User metadata
Rank l33t
Rank
l33t

Started Dead Island 2.
Gameplay is different, even if kicking like crazy my friends the zombies don't go down easily and stand up even under heavy attack.
Not realistic but I'll manage.

I'm a huge fan of DI 1, and Riptide. I loved them when they came out.
I'm liking it so far. Blood everywhere.

PC#1 Pentium 233 MMX - 98SE
PC#2 PIII-1Ghz - 98SE/W2K

"One hates the specialty unobtainium parts, the other laughs in greed listing them under a ridiculous price" - kotel studios

Reply 7044 of 7044, by Kerr Avon

User metadata
Rank Oldbie
Rank
Oldbie

I've just finished playing the excellent System Shock 2 Anniversary Edition, a remaster (though only very slightly) of the all time classic 1999 first person shooter/RPG, a game with a really great story and deep upgrade choices for your weapons, abilities, and psychic powers. This was my first time with the Anniversary Edition (it was only released a few weeks ago), and it's good, but other than some improved graphics and a tiny few quality of life updates (at least one of which is a step back, unfortunately), I'd have to say that playing the original version of the game running with a good selection of fan-made mods (as we've all been doing for many years now) is the better experience, and not only because many of the best mods (and fan-missions) weren't included with the Anniversary Edition (though modders are now helping to get some of them running with the AE version), but also because the AE still has unpatched bugs.

Still, for people new to the game, or for console owners (who never got to play the original version, since it was PC only) the AE is good port of an excellent all time classic game. It's just a remaster, so it's almost 100 % identical to the original in layout, gameplay, upgrade mechanics, etc, but there's nothing at all wrong with that. I mention that in case anyone confuses it with the System Shock Remake, which was a proper remake (newly designed levels, new or improved systems, etc) of the original System Shock.

ss_ba9ae2c702743cdbfd8baa1e67b5ab1f124e254c.1920x1080.jpg?t=1752268648

I've also restarted Braid, the classic 2D platformer/puzzle/time/control game. It's not a puzzle game fan, but Braid is one of the few puzzle games I've ever bothered to finish, along with Portal 1 and 2, Superliminal, Creaks, and a few others over the years. And now, replaying it, I can't remember how to complete most of the puzzles, so I am exercising my (tiny) mind!

screeny-shot-jan-28-2012-4-29-18-pm.png

For a while now, I've been meaning to play Atomfall, an open world (well, town and surrounding countryside) set in a 1950's alternative history version of Northern England. I'll probably start it in a day or two.

atomfall-1.jpg?q=70&fit=crop&w=1140&h=&dpr=1

I've also been meaning to replay Atomic Heart, a mostly brilliant first person shooter that has flashes of immersive sim, and also some strange design choices (it would be nice to find that these things, such as the difficulty spikes, the constant (and I mean constanttttttttt) inane chatter of your player character, and the way you can sometimes walk right into an unwinnable fight due to the far too fast respawning and the unfair odds, had been patched out in the two years or so since I first played it).

960x0.jpg?format=jpg&width=1440