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Captain Vittles posted:I've never played[...] The 3rd Birthday, though, so I dunno how the story changed after the first game.
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# ? May 12, 2011 02:41 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 09:44 |
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Limorkil posted:rpg stuff Good taste. Some people have already suggested these, but here is my short list of "don't misses": Fallout 2 - The first one is alright, but I played the second first so it has always seemed limited to me. Hardcore combat, choices that matter, and terrific atmosphere make for many satisfying playthroughs. KOTOR 2 - I haven't played the restored content mod but it was great anyway. The story is way better than KOTOR. Planescape: Torment - Great story and writing. After I beat it, I looked at a guide and found out I had missed literally half of the game. V:TM Bloodlines - Clunky combat but great story, immersion, and acting. Arcanum - Great story and music, I can't get it to work anymore so I only played through it once. It's buggy as hell- I got all the way to the end only to hit the level cap (40) and crash the game. I thought I had applied the correct patch to fix that but I guess not. If you can get it to work, it's fantastic. Fallout 3 was enjoyable, I was very skeptical of the switch from an isometric rpg to a Bethesda game, but it's good in its own way. Let's gently caress Bro (lol) already said it: Oblivion with guns. Huge world to explore. The story is lacking, npcs are dull and the combat gets really easy toward the end (in the vanilla campaign, I never played any of the DLC). New Vegas seems pretty awesome so far, improving the number of choices you get to make and apparently having them actually matter. I'm probably only halfway through right now so it could still be a big letdown. Mass Effect was okay. Dragon Knight Saga was pretty good- a little too much repetition in some parts, but has some great moments.
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# ? May 12, 2011 04:14 |
Gaggins posted:Good taste. I cannot recommend Bloodlines enough. It is STILL installed on my computer. That haunted house level was seriously spooky and dripping with atmosphere.
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# ? May 12, 2011 10:08 |
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Fallout 1 and 2, absolutely. These, along with BG and PS:T are the best RPG's I've ever played, bar none. You can get them dirt cheap at GOG too. I was very disappointed in FO3 to be honest. One of the coolest things about Fallout was how at the end, the narrator would show you the consequences of your actions via cut-scene, which I thought was pretty awesome at the time because no game I'd played before had bothered to show me the aftermath (rather than just the final boss battle). Also, if you're a nerd, there are some awesome easter eggs in both games (FO2 in particular has the coolest easter egg ever that riffs off a very famous Star Trek TOS episode).
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# ? May 12, 2011 11:50 |
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dis astranagant posted:2 is the aftermath of a bunch of crazies building a compound in the middle of nowhere to test ways of "reintegrating humanity into the natural ecosystem" using even weirder mitochondria based poo poo than the first game. The 3rd Birthday is just dumb and no one should play it, the plot and characterization. PE2 is Resident Evil meets Jurassic Park meets the NRA. Douglas and his dog are the best characters in that game and you can take that opinion from my cold dead hands. On a slight change of subject, dis astranagant, are you still planning on doing a Vagrant Story LP at some point? I remember you mentioning at some point that you can beat it while ignoring most of the grind.
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# ? May 12, 2011 13:47 |
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iastudent posted:PE2 is Resident Evil meets Jurassic Park meets the NRA. Douglas and his dog are the best characters in that game and you can take that opinion from my cold dead hands. Life's getting a little crazy right now and I kinda stopped working on it the last time that other guy said he was going to. I think it's slipped into dueling procrastination at this point.
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# ? May 12, 2011 15:03 |
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Well thanks for all the summaries of Parasite Eve! I now have even less desire to play the game!
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# ? May 12, 2011 15:45 |
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We watched the movie once when we were bored at work. Its worse than you can imagine. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN_VDIxzWhM#t=6m40s The movie actually covers the first eve incident which is referenced in the first game. A japanese scientist tries to culture his dead girlfriends organs in an attempt to ressurect her from the dead, her mitochondria take over, etc and so forth.
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# ? May 12, 2011 16:47 |
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Here is another random question: Why do so many JRPGs seem to use French for their naming conventions? Like the Atelier series or this La Pucelle thing or Recettear. Is it just a translation thing, or is it part of the actual Japanese game? Also, I've never played a JRPG in my life except for 30 minutes of FFIV which wasn't to my liking. So I don't know if this phenomenon is more or less widespread than I imagine it to be, but it seems to crop up a lot and I've always been curious about it.
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# ? May 12, 2011 17:55 |
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Astfgl posted:Here is another random question: EDIT: and yeah it's in the original Japanese game 99.9% of the time.
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# ? May 12, 2011 17:59 |
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Hannibal Smith posted:Mass Effect 1 had awful shooting gameplay, far worse than Alpha Protocol, and it got a free pass by pretty much everyone. I'm replaying ME1 right now and I'm not sure how I put up with this poo poo back in 2008 or whatever. The combat in ME1 is embarassingly clunky. As janky as Alpha Protocol combat is, in a weird way, it's very upfront about being almost a total abstraction. It looks like poo poo but seeing the seams helps you recognize the systems at play. Mass Effect places an emphasis on action gamey immersion and that somehow makes the already bad combat incredibly frustrating and lame.
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# ? May 12, 2011 18:26 |
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Astfgl posted:Here is another random question: Modern Japanese has a lot of french borrow-words. "Animé", for example.
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# ? May 12, 2011 20:12 |
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anime isn't french, it's just the english word animation but shortened
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# ? May 12, 2011 20:28 |
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Astfgl posted:Here is another random question: The japanese find us exotic I guess, and vice versa from my experience. France must look romantic from Japan. There is something like the Jerusalem syndrome in Paris. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_syndrome Wikipedia posted:Japanese visitors are observed to be especially susceptible.
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# ? May 12, 2011 21:57 |
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cugel posted:The japanese find us exotic I guess, and vice versa from my experience. France must look romantic from Japan. There is something like the Jerusalem syndrome in Paris. Essentially this, yes. Recettear was French because the developers let us know the setting was more or less explicitly set in Totally-Not-France (tons of French names etc), so we ran with it. Other games like the Atelier series are kind of a mishmash of stuff (although the early games were really obviously patterned after Baroque-Renaissance Austria) and the developers use it mostly because it seems exotic. Sometimes deeper meaning can be read into it, but a lot of times it's just developers trying to make something seem Foreign And Exotic. Which can be a bit problematic when it comes time to export a game to people who'll spot the terminology inconsistencies more readily. Anyway, I've been playing Trails in the Sky lately and just beat it; Robin played the Japanese version more or less in tandem. We both loved the hell out of it, and now Robin can go straight to SC which is supposed to be all kinds of amazing the wait is going to be absolutely killer for us. That ending is something else (and sort of makes it obvious that the two parts of Trails in the Sky were originally intended to be one game). If anyone likes JRPGs, or poo poo, RPGs in general, even a little bit, go out and buy that game. Buy it new, too, so that XSEED actually gets some money from it. I'd say buy it on PSN, but welp. SpaceDrake fucked around with this message at 02:58 on May 13, 2011 |
# ? May 13, 2011 02:56 |
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I was holding out for PSN Trails in the Sky, but I couldn't wait any longer last week and bought the UMD. I wanted PSN due to my fear of PSP load times, but that proved entirely unfounded. It's a good game, and definitely inspires that "one more quest!" feeling in me.
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# ? May 13, 2011 03:37 |
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Wendell posted:I wanted PSN due to my fear of PSP load times, but that proved entirely unfounded. Yeah, I could have mentioned that I guess. The load times in this game are nothing at all.
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# ? May 13, 2011 04:54 |
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The Black Stones posted:Yeah, I could have mentioned that I guess. The load times in this game are nothing at all. oh awesome, I'm definitely buying this than. I'm on the last chapter of Radiant Historia, great game. The battles are awesome and strategic. Besides Trails, I think the next game I might buy is FF4 complete. Does anyone know if saves from the original can be used in the After Years section? Or can I just skip the main game and go straight to the new content (I've already beaten it a few times).
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# ? May 13, 2011 13:03 |
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casual poster posted:oh awesome, I'm definitely buying this than. The Wii version obviously didn't use previous saves, and I can't see how they could put that into the game. Whole game would need rebalancing. Also, that is out? Holy crap why am I not buying it right now!
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# ? May 13, 2011 15:13 |
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If anyone is a fan of old-school cRPGs (like the original Fallouts) then I strongly recommend you check out Arcanum on GoG. It's on deal at the moment for $4.19 which is almost nothing for a fantastic game.
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# ? May 13, 2011 16:27 |
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Lurchibles posted:If anyone is a fan of old-school cRPGs (like the original Fallouts) then I strongly recommend you check out Arcanum on GoG. It's on deal at the moment for $4.19 which is almost nothing for a fantastic game. I've heard the game is a bit broken (not going to stop me from buying though, I think) in terms of some classes/races being useless and some bugs or something. Is this anything to even be worried about? Are there fan patches and poo poo around?
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# ? May 13, 2011 18:48 |
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Fan patches and mods out the wazoo. Just google, or go to Terra Arcanum.
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# ? May 13, 2011 18:50 |
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FF4 Complete Collection does not pull saves from the original FF4 to Interlude or The After Years. Each game's save data is its own thing and they don't interact with each other. You do unlock artwork and stuff for completing the original FF4 though, so if you're interested in that, you'll want to play it again anyways. I would say to do it for the new graphics and things, but most of the enemies are re-used in The After Years anyways.
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# ? May 13, 2011 22:42 |
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glod posted:FF4 Complete Collection does not pull saves from the original FF4 to Interlude or The After Years. Each game's save data is its own thing and they don't interact with each other. You do unlock artwork and stuff for completing the original FF4 though, so if you're interested in that, you'll want to play it again anyways. I would say to do it for the new graphics and things, but most of the enemies are re-used in The After Years anyways. It was my first rpg (the DS version (I just got into them like 5 years ago)) so I may just play it for that reason. The story was great and the characters memorable.
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# ? May 13, 2011 23:03 |
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NISA had one of their press events today, announcing Atelier Totori (which was a no-brainer for them to release, it was just a question of when) and Cladun 2. Cladun was a fun little roguelike dungeon crawler, if a bit tough at times. At only $20 I'd say to give the first Cladun a shot, but it's PSN only and...yeah. They're also releasing a Bleach game, which got some of their fanboys a bit miffed that their precious company is releasing such a mainstream title.
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# ? May 13, 2011 23:45 |
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Out of curiosity, did anyone here play The Last Remnant on PC? It's a pretty good game when it's not on the 360. Fairly long, tons of sidequests, interesting battle system, fairly difficult if a bit uneven (one of the first boss fights is basically a toss-up as to whether or not he kills you before you can heal or not), and it's on sale a lot. I picked it up for $10 in the Steam holiday sale, and I'm playing through it for the third time at this point.
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# ? May 14, 2011 00:22 |
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amaranthine posted:The Last Remnant I borrowed it from a friend for 360 and really liked it but never got to finish it so I'm waiting for it to go on sale on Steam. How is the PC version different, by the way?
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# ? May 14, 2011 00:41 |
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Lurchibles posted:If anyone is a fan of old-school cRPGs (like the original Fallouts) then I strongly recommend you check out Arcanum on GoG. It's on deal at the moment for $4.19 which is almost nothing for a fantastic game. All OVER this! Thanks for the heads up. Once you get past the strange control scheme this game is one of the best ever.
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# ? May 14, 2011 00:43 |
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glod posted:I borrowed it from a friend for 360 and really liked it but never got to finish it so I'm waiting for it to go on sale on Steam. How is the PC version different, by the way? They fixed everything. Infinitely better loading times, crisper graphics, the leader limit is removed so you can just use all your named characters with no problems, save anywhere, mission DLCs all included, and they fixed the stat system so that you can't permanently gently caress yourself and can much easier just play through the game how you like. The two versions are night and day.
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# ? May 14, 2011 00:56 |
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Stelas posted:They fixed everything. Infinitely better loading times, crisper graphics, the leader limit is removed so you can just use all your named characters with no problems, save anywhere, mission DLCs all included, and they fixed the stat system so that you can't permanently gently caress yourself and can much easier just play through the game how you like. The two versions are night and day. Oh wow, no kidding! And here the only difference I was aware of was the ability to tell your units not to use certain skills. Now I'm just more excited to play it again.
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# ? May 14, 2011 01:04 |
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I would like to thank you guys for putting Divinity 2 on my radar. It is a lot of fun, with just enough customisation (could be more though, although the creature is an awesome extra) and roleplay. The story seems to be kind of meh but okay so far (level 13 now, didn't play the first game) but it doesn't need to be better. It's a good intro that really explains the whole 'hero'-role you're in, and although some things are a bit illogical that's easily excused. Fun-wise it's definitely one of the better RPGs I've played, so thanks again.
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# ? May 14, 2011 02:07 |
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Taeke posted:I would like to thank you guys for putting Divinity 2 on my radar. It is a lot of fun, with just enough customisation (could be more though, although the creature is an awesome extra) and roleplay. The story seems to be kind of meh but okay so far (level 13 now, didn't play the first game) but it doesn't need to be better. It's a good intro that really explains the whole 'hero'-role you're in, and although some things are a bit illogical that's easily excused. It's also got some hilarious references scattered here and there. First I noticed was one of the drunken guards in the first town with whom you could claim to be Merlin the Happy Pig.
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# ? May 14, 2011 02:32 |
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Stelas posted:They fixed everything. Infinitely better loading times, crisper graphics, the leader limit is removed so you can just use all your named characters with no problems, save anywhere, mission DLCs all included, and they fixed the stat system so that you can't permanently gently caress yourself and can much easier just play through the game how you like. The two versions are night and day. No kidding? I thought it was just a straight port, now I might have to look into it, despite having beat it on the 360. Being able to have a team of all named characters is more than enough to make me replay. I don't have a PC controller, however, so I have to ask: Are the keyboard bindings good or will I have to get my hands on a controller? Edit: Also, the save-anywhere thing isn't exclusive to the PC version. TLR is one of those rare games that does allow you to save anywhere, which is actually quite capable of loving you over.
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# ? May 14, 2011 02:46 |
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Infinity Gaia posted:No kidding? I thought it was just a straight port, now I might have to look into it, despite having beat it on the 360. Keyboard bindings are pretty good, and I believe you can remap them to whatever you want.
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# ? May 14, 2011 02:48 |
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amaranthine posted:Keyboard bindings are pretty good, and I believe you can remap them to whatever you want. Yep, I played through entirely on keyboard and it was just fine. My bad about the saving issue, I just remember being a lot more ready to quicksave on the PC if I thought I was going to be in trouble.
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# ? May 14, 2011 02:53 |
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Stelas posted:Yep, I played through entirely on keyboard and it was just fine. Well, cool. Guess I'll look into grabbing the PC version sometime soon. Maybe I'll try a magic-centric Rush this time.
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# ? May 14, 2011 02:57 |
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I've never played the 360 version of Last Remnant, but I bought the PC DVD version (basically a disc Steam install), and I didn't notice anything quick about the load times. Some of the combat and cutscene load times were absurdly long, like 30+ seconds. Some scenes were faster, and after some config tweaking they became somewhat tolerable. That's just my experience though. 3 GHz Core 2 Duo, 8800 GTS 512, SSD.
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# ? May 14, 2011 03:35 |
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softcorps posted:I've never played the 360 version of Last Remnant, but I bought the PC DVD version (basically a disc Steam install), and I didn't notice anything quick about the load times. Some of the combat and cutscene load times were absurdly long, like 30+ seconds. Some scenes were faster, and after some config tweaking they became somewhat tolerable. I had almost the opposite experience, I find myself often wondering "why do they even have load screens?" (i5-750, gtx 460, terribly fragmented raptor ) Now that I think about it, though, I do think the load times were quite a bit longer on my old machine, which was a somewhat comparable c2d and an 8800gtx.
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# ? May 14, 2011 04:11 |
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You can also swap a flag in the Last Remanent ini file on the PC to control all the inventories for all your party members. In addition, you can download a trainer and set the arbitrary limit on your army at the beginning to the normal limit (5 squads of 5, or 25 people total, iirc) so you can field all the people you recruit as soon as possible. Just avoid army units if you do this, or you'll be swamped with generic army units heh. Finally, if it wasn't mentioned, the PC version adds a turbo button to speed up fights (you may want to enable auto-QTE if you do though, or whatever that option is). Really saves a ton of time through a playthrough. I had zero load times on a pretty typical c2d gaming machine. Not sure why the poster above was getting 30 second load times to be honest - strange indeed. Rascyc fucked around with this message at 04:39 on May 14, 2011 |
# ? May 14, 2011 04:37 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 09:44 |
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Oh man I had forgotten about the fast forward button. You could even ask the game to just do all the QTE events for you. It made grinding effortless.
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# ? May 14, 2011 05:05 |