Saturday!
Last week, Hoosegow Flask asked “How necessary is playing the original to understanding any references in the game?” about Wasteland 2. The answer is, of course, “None”… but I did have an excellent adventure at the Agricultural Center where giant vegetables were growing and giant rabbits were attacking me. If you played the original, you remember the Agricultural Center mission there where you eventually ended up taking on Harry, The Bunny Master.
In Wasteland 2, you can visit Harry’s grave.
Now, it’s just generally awesome to fight giant insects and giant bunnies in an overgrown Agricultural Center by itself. There is no need to have played the original to enjoy the heck out of that. But… well, the grave for the boss fight from 25 years ago was a nice touch.
It’s enough to make me not mind not playing Shadow of Mordor. I still am not thinking “I NEED THE NEW SYSTEM” quite yet… but I am noticing that Sunset Overdrive is a 360 exclusive. And I am noticing that quite hard.
So… what are you playing?
Love Wasteland 2. So much. I didn’t play the original but I recognize a reference even when I don’t understand it. I’m actually starting over again because my character creation strategy has left me weak. ‘S okay, though. I enjoy the start of the game.Report
The old “give everybody 10 intelligence” trick, eh?Report
As far as I know, the Nemesis system for Shadows of Mordor (ya’ know, one of the main selling points of the game) isn’t as ambitious in the 360 or PS3 editions of the game.
http://www.gamespot.com/articles/one-of-shadow-of-mordor-s-most-ambitious-features-scaled-back-for-xbox-360-ps3/1100-6417861/Report
NOOOO!!!
The Nemesis system is what sold me on it. And I don’t want to buy a PS4 or Xbox One yet….
And I don’t want to play it on PC. Seems like a perfect console game.Report
That sad, I’d really like to see an actual list — all the articles are based on a single interview in February, and the 360/PS3 version isn’t out until next month. What, exactly, did they cut?Report
Hrm. This is actually a pretty brilliant marketing technique.Report
What? Nemesis? Or scaling it back?
Given the fact that the numbers of 360s and PS3’s in existance > the next gen ones, and the fact that the publisher of Shadows of Morder isn’t tied to any particular console maker, I’m guessing their stated reasons (hardware limitations forcing some scale backs) are probably accurate.
They’ve got no reason to forego sales (and go through the effort of reducing a feature set) just to push more people to PS4. Anyone not buying Shadow of Morder for 360 or PS3 because it’s “not as good” is a sale they’re not getting.Report
The original Wasteland had been sitting on my HD, untouched, for some time. I did try it for a bit, not intending to play to completion, but just to get a feel for the game. My biggest problem when trying to play older games is not the graphics, it’s always the interface. The interface for a game released in the 80s is horrible by today’s standards. Early on, the characters have to climb over some rocks at a few different spots in a cave. It takes 5 keystrokes per attempt:
Press ‘u’ for use
Select character number
Press ‘s’ skill
Select number of appropriate skill
Select direction to apply skill
I’ve also started playing Endless Legend. I’m quite fond of 4X games. Nothing makes the hours disappear for me quite like them.Report
I have still been playing my way through Conquest of Elysium 3. It is definitely an interesting strategy game. I also got a copy of The Banner Saga for the iPad, and I have been having a good time with that.
If you guys keep talking about wasteland 2, I might end up getting that as well, especially with Pillars of Eternity being delayed.Report