Today, I Am A Man

I have to say that, because yesterday I was a gibbering ball of jelly.

Amnesia has this … reputation.  It’s one of the few games that is generally considered to be genuinely frightening by even the most jaded fan of the genre, and it’s one of those games that people dare each other to play in a dark room with headphones on.

I bought the thing during Steam’s 2010 Thanksgiving sale and honestly haven’t had the guts to give it a try since.

With the recent Humble Bundle putting a spotlight back onto Amnesia – and four other excellent games – however, I decided that, reputation be damned, I was going to strap on a headset, turn off all the lights, and play it from opening to credits in one sitting.

For the record, I lasted almost three hours at this.  After one particularly unnerving sequence involving water, boxes, and splashing – and here I am being deliberately vague, but once you play it it will make sense – I needed a bit of a walk around in well lit rooms before going to bed.

Nonetheless, I was back at the keyboard the next afternoon, headphones on and room lights off.  We won’t mention the considerable amount of ambient light in the room, as it was tragically unavoidable and gentlemen do not point out these sorts of things.

Seven hours later, and well after the point where the ambient light had faded into dusk and then full-on-night, I was done.

I do believe that there is a point where one becomes just a little desensitized to being brutally killed over and over again in ways one is hopeless to defend against.  There’s a segment late in the game where you are searching, in a room where you have nearly zero visibility, for items to complete a puzzle while at the same time being hunted by creatures who seem quite unimpaired by the lack of light, and that segment alone was responsible for at least a dozen deaths in the space of a very few minutes.  After that many short bursts of terror, I didn’t have the energy to be frightened any more.

I was still quite able to be disturbed, however.  A good deal of the last part of the game involves exploring various torture chambers, and the writers seem to have delighted in unearthing the most brutal of the various ways in which humans have, over the centuries, been quite keen on causing other humans a great deal of pain.  I’m not certain that everything was historically accurate but it all had the ring of truth about it.

Leaving the atmosphere aside, the game has a control scheme that adds nicely to the general feeling of being helpless and hunted.  Your character has direct control over most items in the environment.  That means that, for example, if you run up to a door, you need to grab the door and swing it open – there’s no “press A to open door” button.

So, to continue the example, should you be being chased through dark halls by something nasty and you run up to a door,  grab it, and realize that it opens towards you so you need to back up to open it, meaning that you are backing TOWARDS the thing that is chasing you, that is a very intense sensation.  It’s just cumbersome enough to add extra tension without stooping to the deliberately-obtuse tank controls favored by some survival horror franchises.

Highly recommended.  Buy it, install, turn your lights off and plug your headphones in and immerse yourself, it is a glorious thing.

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Wait, how’s that again?

I swear, I ought to just add a “Montowers” category for my blog posts.

Here’s one of the stranger creatures.  Say what you will about some of the less appealing aspects of the game, you can’t fault them for not coming up with original ideas.

I have fought a ton of polar bears in games over the years.  When I was playing Everquest, the first character I played seriously was a barbarian shaman, and you have to go a long way from your starting area before you STOP fighting polar bears as a barbarian.

I’ve also see a lot of media over the years tack the “were-” prefix on to just about anything.

This is the first time I’ve seen the two together, though.  So, points to Buffstone for making me stop, look at my iPhone screen, and say “seriously, the hell?”

 

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A little more on Montowers

I’ve been really enjoying Montowers, the game I mentioned last week, despite some minor frustrations.  The monsters I’m taming and summoning are starting to take over 2 hours to summon, now, and I’m having to do a lot more resource gathering to summon and level them.  At the same time, I’m having some pretty tough fights if I fall behind the curve.

Fortunately, I’ve learned that I can queue up a bunch of actions and just wait for my lock screen to look something like this:

My background, by the way, is from this most excellent Three Panel Soul strip, part of a short series of comics where I felt like they’d installed cameras in my house to watch my life.

But I digress.

Part of what’s kept me hooked on Montowers, to return to the topic of this, is that it’s really well suited to a mobile phone game – you can start it up, play for 1 or 2 minutes, and feel like you’ve accomplished something.  I’m even still enjoying the collect-them-all style of play, though I was a little disappointed when I started getting some monsters from the nastier bits of the monster manual and realized that they don’t have any attacks that are really tailored to them.

I had a cockatrice for a while, for instance, and he didn’t have any sort of stun attack to simulate turning an enemy to stone.  That sort of thing.

I don’t know if it has a proper ending.  I know that there are a finite number of towers, and that each has a finite ending, so theoretically I should stop once I clear that last tower – if I make it that far.  I do know that I’m not going to actually try to collect them ALL, as “rare” creatures can take hundreds of fights before you actually catch them, and towers bosses are worst of all.  Maybe I’ll try to collect all the “common” and “uncommon” monsters and call it good.

To close this out, some cheesecake:

Oh, a story to share with you that really goes to show the sort of thing my wife has to put up with:

A few days ago, while I was trying to finish up Fantasy Defense, I was fighting off a particularly nasty – and scantily clad – demoness.  In order to upgrade some units that were closer to the enemy in question, I had to take a few units that were further away and sell them.

While I’m doing this, I say to my wife “I just had to sacrifice some guys in order to stop a demon that preys upon the primal lusts of men… I won, but I kind of feel bad for throwing them under the succubus.”

To her credit, she didn’t even try to throttle me.

 

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I gather that I’m supposed to catch all of these.

I wasn’t really part of the Pokemon generation.  When the show started airing in Japan, I was living in Los Angeles which was home to several Japanese video stores, so I saw the first six or so episodes, bought some of the merchandise – let’s face it, them pokeymans is cute – and didn’t really pay much attention to the whole thing.

I also have never played any of the assorted Facebook games which revolve around making you wait to do things unless you’re willing to pay for the privilege of not waiting.

So, “Montowers ~Legend of Summoners~” is new to me in a couple of ways.  It is a no-holds-barred cash grab designed to make you sweat and grovel for tokens, earned ever so slowly through game play but conveniently available in bulk lots in the in-app store, and it revoles around the catching and raising of various monsters to do your bidding and fight for you.

Also it falls neatly into the category of games I HAVE played an awful lot of over the years, that being games designed to pander to the basest instincts of man.

I don’t usually write pic-heavy posts, but it is just so darned convenient to take screenshots on the iPhone, I can’t resist.  I warn you in advance.

The plot, as it were, of Montowers is that you’re a resident of a peaceful, bucolic land, just minding your own peaceful, bucolic business, when all of a sudden massive monster-filled towers pop right up out of the ground.  Like daisies!

Obviously, you can’t stand for this, so your next order of business is to storm these towers, killing or enslaving the occupants of each floor with an eye towards making your peaceful, bucolic land all peaceful and bucolic again.

In this pursuit, you are aided by a peaceful, bucolic, demonic assistant with the traditional fashion sense of demonic assistants throughout literature, to wit:

Oh, Japan.

Anyway, the basic gameplay of Montowers is pretty straightforward.  First, you fight a bunch of different monsters:

The actual combat is pretty simple and you don’t have a lot of input.  If you notice the little red area and the little golden circle up above?  Well, the little gold circle bounces back and forth and you have to tap the screen when it passes over the red area. If you hit it just right, your monsters get to attack before the other guy.

Defeating an enemy monster gets you experience and very occasionally potions or tokens.  If you’re lucky, you get to capture the monster you just fought.  Kind of.  What you actually capture is a “monster coin”, which can be turned into an actual monster through a summoning process which involves mining up raw materials and then hitting “summon” and waiting.

The cooler the monster, the longer the summoning time and the more raw materials you need to collect.  These raw materials, by the way, have their own respawn timer, so you’re waiting for ther materials to respawn so you can start the actual summoning timer.  So far, the longest summoning timer I’ve seen is 50 minutes.

These timers can, of course, be reduced or eliminated by spending tokens, which leads naturally to the aforementioned cash shop where you can load up for ever-so-reasonable fees.

Thankfully, all of these timers run in the background, even when you’re not playing, and the game integrates into the iOS notifications system – so you can, for instance, mine up all the available resources and then start summoning a monster from its coin, exit the game and eventually you’ll get a popup on the home screen telling you that you can mine for more stuff and collect your latest monster.

These same resources are used in increasing your monster’s level, which increases its attack rating and hit points – very useful stuff – and tends to either bolt on more and more protective armor – if it’s a male monster – or take said armor away if not.

Boy monsters:

I suppose, technically, a skeleton is about as gender-neutral as you can get, but I am classing it as a boy monster just because.

Girl Monsters:

I’m not actually griping about this, mind you.  I am firmly in the game’s target audience, after all.

The game supports the iPhone 4 retina display, so the art is all high resolution and pretty and stuff.  Sadly it’s not an iPad app as well, but I suppose it’s really designed more to be the thing you’re carrying with you and occasionally interact with when it makes your phone chirp and ask for attention.  Kind of like a tamagotchi, when you look at it like that, though it won’t actually starve to death and accuse you of being a bad parent.

In the final analysis, it is rather a satisfying experience.  Leveling up your monsters and blowing through the ever-more-difficult tower levels is fun and – thus far – not terribly stressful, and collecting the monsters as you catch them ticks all the appropriate checkboxes in the part of the brain that likes to put all of your DVDs in alphabetical order and has a set of 50 state quarters in a little blue book.

It’s very slow paced, of course, due to all the timers, but once you actually get a few monsters summoned and raised you can go and fight other monsters as much as you like – there aren’t any artificial lockouts there.  It’s not a social game, meaning that you’re not under pressure from your friends to pay-to-play more to catch up with them, so any buying of tokens is entirely dependent upon your own patience level.

I’d write more here, but I think my gathering timer is up.  Got to get back to catching them all.

Posted in iOS, videogames | 3 Comments

Mind the iGAP

A few years ago, upon the disturbing realization that I’d hand-imported a PSP from Japan just so I could have it in white, then bought a bunch of games for it that I hadn’t really played, I embarked upon what I called the PSP Appreciation Project, a rather fanciful way of saying “hey, I ought to play some of these games.”

My recent foray into tower defending, then, would mark the start of the iOS Games Appreciation Project, which is at least ten times cooler than the PSP Appreciation Project in that it has a better acronym.

Electronic Arts, for all that I’ve been harboring a 25-year-old-grudge against them, does put some effort into their iOS efforts, and – even better – seems to put them on sale regularly.  It’s how I came to own Mirror’s Edge for iPhone, a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it affair but one with a surprising amount of style.

When the console version of Mirror’s Edge came out, in 2007 or so, it was a terrible seductive world, all stark white and splashes of red, scored with enthralling ambient music, wrapped in a promising story of fractured future utopias, and – for me, at least – mind-bogglingly difficult.  That is to say, I downloaded the demo, utterly failed to complete the demo, and put it aside as something I could never possibly appreciate.

The iPhone version has the same design style going on but, well, is something that I was actually able to play.  The shift in perspective from 1st-person to 3rd-person is, I think, largely responsible for that, though the frightfully intuitive touch controls help a lot.

At an hour or so to play through, it’s almost more tech demo than actual game, but you can always replay levels if you want to try collecting all the collectibles or going for speed runs.  Even if you don’t, it’s an hour that I found well worth the 99 cents.

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Done Defending

I finished Fantasy Defense tonight, marking the first time that I’ve played a “serious” iOS game to completion, and I’m starting to see what the doomsayers are talking about when they question the future of dedicated gaming handhelds.  I spent about 15 highly enjoyable hours setting up my neat little rows of mages and archers and watching them turn a rogue’s gallery of fantasy villains into so much swiss cheese, which is more time than I’ve spent with either my PSP or DS since finishing Project Diva back in February of last year.

For the price – free, at the moment – , it’s hard to find any complaints with Fantasy Defense.  I will admit that it did crash a fair number of times while I was playing, but the levels are usually over in less than 10 minutes so it never gets too frustrating.

There IS s a bit of a difficulty spike right about the point where you hit level 40 (of 50).  This is probably where the developers would like you to drop some cash in the convenient in-app store to power up your units a bit, and I actually feel a little guilty that I never did.  I did have to spend a couple of hours near the end  of the game going back to earlier levels and grinding experience before I could actually beat some of the final levels, and dropping 99 cents on some in-game currency would have saved me those hours of grinding, but I’m slightly more proud because I stuck it out.

Oddly, when you DO beat the last level, your reward is a static screen with music playing and no way to get back to the application.  It’s not even a particularly attractive picture:

Now, I did point out in my last post that the developers kind of went over-the-top with the whole Heroic Anatomy thing, and it was therefore a little bit of a surprise to find out that they had, at some point, gotten just a little tiny bit of shame and decided to cover up their artwork JUST a little, most notably on the Ice Mage and Blaster units.

Here, for example, are the mage character portraits from in-game:

 

…and here are what appear to be the original character portraits.  Sorry about the low resolution on this but it does get things across.

Oh, Korea, what are we going to do with you?

Anyway, quite recommended, especially as it’s free and can be finished without giving in to the siren call of the in-game-item-store.

 

Posted in iOS, videogames | 1 Comment

In which, I play a questionable iPad game.

Several months ago, when the iPad 2 was released, I inherited my wife’s old iPad 1.

This is a pretty normal way for me to get hardware, by the way, through the hand-me-down process.  It’s a beautiful thing.

Anyway, I immediately loaded up all sorts of network management software on it and it’s made a great portable VNC device.

I bought some games for it, as well, but I really haven’t given any of them more than a cursory glance.  After all, when I have the iPad with me, I’m usually at home and have other things to do.  I have not yet, therefore, flung any birds or cut any ropes.

I did, however, stumble across a recommendation to try a tower defense game called “Fantasy Defense”, and this has become the first iPad game that I’ve put more than about 10 minutes into.  It’s only my third foray into the Tower Defense genre, mind you – I’ve played through Defense Grid: The Awakening and Plants Vs Zombies before, and quite enjoyed both, but not to the point where I felt the need to go looking for more games in the same mien.

Fantasy Defense is a Korean game and is, at least for the moment, available free of charge from the iTunes store.  There is, of course, a facility in the game where you can buy stuff, so that is presumably where they hope to make their fortune.

Specifically, they hope to make their fortune from impatient players, as the stuff you can buy from the in-app store all seems to be, at best, slightly more effective versions of stuff you can earn by playing the game.  Like, if you can buy a thingy that makes your hero 40% more effective with in-game currency, you can buy a thingy to make your hero 50% more effective with real money.  So far, anyway.

The gameplay isn’t anything too groundbreaking.  Monsters come out of portals and follow paths towards your base.  If enough of them reach your base, you die.  You get a limited supply of resources to start, these resources are used to place units and upgrade units, your units kill the monsters walking towards your base and you get more resources every time they kill a monster.

You can also place a single “hero” unit on every map, quite powerful and best placed at a choke-point.

I’ve only gotten through 5 of 50 maps, but so far it is wonderfully addictive and I foresee a fair bit of this game in my immediate future.

I do have one tiny quibble with the game, and that is that the characters are depicted as, err, heroic fantasy tropes turned up to eleven, and then turned up a couple more notches.

Take, for example, the “champion” hero.

I’m not sure what’s worse – the massive bejeweled codpiece or the take-your-own-eyes-out shoulderpads.

As bad as he is, the Archmage hero is, well…

I’m all FOR being pandered to, but this poor woman looks to have a medical condition.

The final hero, the bowmaster, is a little less over-the-top, in that her breasts are ONLY about the size of her head:

And sadly, even the grunt units suffer from a certain top-heaviness that could really stand to be dialed back a cup size or ten:

The monster design is a little more sensible, and I’m a fan:

Normally, when I see this sort of thing, I just have to kind of sigh, shrug, and say “oh, Japan, what are we going to do with you?”

I guess I’m going to have to extend that sentiment a little further west from now on.

Posted in iOS, videogames | 1 Comment

Bang for the buck.

I think I’ll be moving Blades of Time off of my active play stack and in to the category of games I boot up when there’s a Steam sale and a related spike in population.  I’ve had a ton of fun with the multiplayer, but there really aren’t a lot of people playing it so I wind up playing with the same two or three gentlemen over and over again.

That said, I got a ton of play time from a reasonably small financial outlay.  I’m used to dropping, oh, let’s say twenty bucks on your average 10 hour action title, playing it through once and putting it on the “finished” stack.  That’s cheaper than most forms of entertainment right there, though the occasional $50 5-hour game does skew things a little.

I paid $36 for Blades of Time and played it for over 50 hours, having fun all the time.  Any way you look at it, that’s a pretty good entertainment value.

I finally ranked up to “Master”, which took a lot of multiplayer hours.  In all those hours playing the online mode, I only ran in to one other Master-ranked player, so I feel pretty proud of that as an accomplishment.  I don’t know if there’s a rank above master, but I do know that it would probably take me 15-20 hours more playing to find out.  I don’t have that kind of devotion in me. 🙂

 

 

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I’ve mended something again! Also, unexpected uses for a potholder.

As I mentioned about a month ago, my PS3 stopped reading discs.  This was vexing for a couple of reasons, but primarily because it was a launch 60GB PS3 with PS2 backwards compatibility.

Sony wants $150 to fix these, and I’m not actually sure that they’ll even fix a 60GB anymore.

On the other hand, some basic internet searching strongly suggested that the bit that had died was the laser module.  Furthermore, these things aren’t TOO expensive.  I got mine from Dealextreme for about 35 bucks, and found a series of videos on youtube that walked me through the whole disassembly and reassembly process.  I had to buy a T10 security Torx driver, which set me back another six dollars, but I am certain that I will use it again in future even though this is the first time that I have ever needed one.

That may be wishful thinking, but it only brought the total cost up to $41.

This is the part in question.  It’s not actually that hard to get to, it just takes a fair bit of time.  There are about 20 screws and a few cable disconnections and reconnections between you and it when you start.

Apart from an issue getting the disc insertion sensor reattached – it is a tiny fiddly connector that was designed to be manipulated by tiny elves, not humans with human fingers – the whole thing went very smoothly.  Oh, I did accidentally format the PS3’s hard drive, but that was an entirely separate issue and I want it on record that that could have happened to anyone who was impatient and not reading prompts before pushing buttons.

I’m not making a strong case for my competency, there.

Anyway, I’ve tested it and it plays my PS2 and PS3 games with no complaints.  Life is good.

The whole process was helped considerably by a chance discovery at Ikea the other day.

Our nearest Ikea did a remodel of their Marketplace section, where all the kitchen gadgets live, and they had some promotions going on that encouraged us to do a little more browsing than we might normally have done.

I was in the pots and pans sections when I noticed these amazing potholders, and immediately bought four of them even though I very rarely have pots that need holding:

I have three desks.  Two have glass tops and the last has a metal top.  These are very nice to work on when doing paperwork or just using a computer, but they are terribly inappropriate work surfaces for anything involving small tools or small parts.  Anything dropped from a height of more than an inch or two or accidentally brushed has a tendency to roll right off an edge.

These things – and I will give them their name, “Gunstig” – are not much more than silicone rubber squares with a sort of waffle texture to them, but they are fantastic at keeping things in place.  As I was pulling apart the PS3, having a couple of these handy meant that I could organize the screws as I was taking them out, making it much easier to put them back in the correct order.

It was a Sunday morning well spent.  I get to have the heady glow of having mended something, and that honestly more than makes up for the initial vexation I felt with Sony over the thing breaking in the first place.

 

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Oh, I get it, it was his SLED

A few years ago, in an attempt to be social and meet other humans, I attended a few – half a dozen or so, probably – episodes of an anime club.

It didn’t turn out to be very interactive.  The club format was about 5 minutes of one of the officers standing up and talking before starting the night’s program, at which point everyone just sort of watched the screen or played video games in the back until the night was over.

So, it failed as a way to meet people, but it worked out pretty well at introducing me to new anime.  They had a habit of showing a single episode of a show every week and showing about 8 different programs, so I got to see quite a few different shows – just not very much of any of them.  In the years since, I’ve gone back and watched some of these shows from start to finish and they’ve generally been quite good, so whoever was making the programming up did have some taste.

Anyway, one of these shows was Stellvia of the Universe, which I only saw shown at the club meetings once and which I just got around to watching.  I’ve seen plenty of art from the show online, of course, and the DVD covers in stores, so I’ve been kind of aware of it without  knowing much about it.  My biggest question, going in to the program, was actually “which of these girls is Stellvia?”

Turns out, Stellvia is the space station.  So that was a pretty anticlimactic reveal.

It was a pretty excellent show, by the way.  I realize that I’m nine years late to the party on this but I wanted to put my two cents in.

It has a pretty good hook.  About two centuries ago, the electromagnetic shockwave of a supernova tore through the solar system, utterly trashing the Earth and killing most everyone.  The survivors managed to get back on their feet and learned that, while they’d survived the initial blast of EM, there was a wave of solid debris from the same explosion heading their way.  It was travelling much slower, mind you, but it basically meant the extinction of all life on earth.

To survive, they put aside the concepts of nations and started a massive space program designed to help humanity survive the “Second Wave”.

The show kicks off a few months before this Second Wave is due to hit earth and features the main character – whose name is not, as I mentioned, Stellvia – leaving her home on earth to train to become a pilot.  She’s, oh man, she’s a bit clumsy and a bit of a crybaby and a terrible pilot but is really good with computers, also there’s a boy that she seems to get along with pretty well.

By the end of the third episode, you know how things are going to end.  Over the course of a 26 episode series, she’s going to learn to become a great pilot, help save humanity from the second wave while learning lots of lessons about herself, and generally have all kinds of wacky adventures in the meantime.  Presumably, she’s going to get the boy and they’ll finally kiss in the last scene of episode 26.  It’s the sort of nice relaxed anime where you can just turn your brain off and float along in the comfort zone.

Without going too in-depth with the spoilers, everything mentioned above happens by the end of episode 10, at which point someone comments that the whole thing that’s been keeping humanity unified for the last two centuries has come and gone, there’s all these weapons lying around unused now, and oh gosh it’s been a long time since we’ve had a war .

That’s the point where I got dragged out of my comfort zone and the show really got its hooks in.

The series never actually turns into a grimdark humanity-turning-on-itself sort of story, but it certainly fooled me for a bit.  Strongly recommended if, like me, you’ve been under a rock for a few years now and somehow missed it up until now.

 

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