|
Link just immediately limps back to the bed and sleeps for an extra 20 years. On another note, It's kind of ridiculous how Rogue Galaxy gets overlooked while Star Ocean 3 is constantly griped about, because this game is Star Ocean but done better - you aren't stuck on endless medieval planets 80% of the game, item crafting is fun and meaningful, the voice acting is decent and the combat options are mostly worth using. It's just the difference between a game that's so unbalanced it's meme worthy and a much better game that just doesn't try to be anything but what it is and so doesn't get as much attention. Basically, if you want a good Star Ocean, rogue Galaxy scratches the same itch. Also I like that the seven swords of power or whatev are a thing you can get, but they aren't important to the plot. They are just a world-building thing that you can choose to seek out or ignore. I've only got to the mining planet so far, but I read about that aspect and like that. Most settings have every myth be important to saving the universe, so it's nice to have a few irrelevant myths that can be explored but aren't linked to each other. It feels more realistic than GET SEVEN SWORDS TO UNLOCK THE PATH TO EDEN!
|
# ? Oct 18, 2020 10:46 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 15:21 |
|
Posted this in the wrong thread Recently released rogue like Hades has a mode just for people bad at videogames like me that makes it easier to complete
|
# ? Oct 18, 2020 21:48 |
|
Mokinokaro posted:Shame about the slurs in the chat on occasion in that video. Bloody gamers.
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 13:53 |
|
Vigil: The longest night is Igavania styled game with a small smattering of dark souls in there but not enough to call it soulslike, and it has a stickbug enemy thats massive enough to use as a platform which was kinda cool to find as a logical mimic enemy in a huge forest. The thing that really gets me is that theres also smaller poison moths that look like the broken ends of tree branches, and those took me a lot longer to catch because they take a bit before they move, even if you step on them. It also has a cool logical next step from dark souls enchanting where each gem has dual purpose of either applying a status, or providing a special effect like boosting your spellcasting or providing a .01% of enemies max hp added as damage per attack, so gems are far more likely to be useful in some way.
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 14:48 |
|
CJacobs posted:It also provides some really sneaky world building. If you listen close to what he's actually talking about during his rambles, you can piece together that he's the one who wrote the dreaded Tennyson Report that Trench flipped his lid about. At one point he brings up his cat at home being taken care of by the neighbor, which he mentions offhand in the main game a few times. In the DLC Langston says that he named his cat, Alfred, after his favorite poet. The poet being referred to is Alfred Tennyson, whose poem "Tears, Idle Tears" is quoted at the top of the Report. The part that made me go "hmm" was when Langston mentions that he doesn't remember how he got the cat. Given the world he lives in and specifically what part of the building he works in, that should probably raise a few more eyebrows than it does.
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 15:27 |
|
Telekinetic cat buddy confirmed for Control 2
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 15:38 |
|
Anno 2205 wisely decided to ditch the washed-out, desaturated color palette of the previous (and subsequent) games and went with a rich, colorful palette that I think makes the game look so much prettier than most city-builders even in areas like the arctic and moon.
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 17:39 |
|
Killzone Shadow Fall: You can bump into and push the dead bodies floating in low gravity.
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 17:42 |
|
Polaron posted:The part that made me go "hmm" was when Langston mentions that he doesn't remember how he got the cat. Given the world he lives in and specifically what part of the building he works in, that should probably raise a few more eyebrows than it does. It is known that Langston has a real knack for taking care of altered items because he treats them nicely. Altered cat or not it probably appreciates him all the same.
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 18:17 |
|
Captain Hygiene posted:Telekinetic cat buddy confirmed for Control 2 You can't just say that and not post sources
|
# ? Oct 19, 2020 23:41 |
|
Len posted:You can't just say that and not post sources It’s a joke, read the spoilers
|
# ? Oct 20, 2020 00:23 |
|
Captain Hygiene posted:Telekinetic cat
|
# ? Oct 20, 2020 01:00 |
|
I'm fine with either option, to be honest.
|
# ? Oct 20, 2020 01:29 |
|
haveblue posted:It’s a joke, read the spoilers I CAN DREAM
|
# ? Oct 20, 2020 02:22 |
|
Oh great now that can knock poo poo off shelves they're not even jumping on.
|
# ? Oct 20, 2020 09:12 |
|
I've been playing FFVIII for the first time, and I love that the events around getting your airship are so perfect for how 'discovering an ancient flying machine' would go. 1. Squall prods ineffectually at the controls of the thing he doesn't understand until someone asks if he has any idea what he's doing enough times that he blurts out he doesn't. This is not a cutscene; you're literally supposed to randomly hit buttons on a control panel while someone wonders what you're doing. 2. Accidentally launch the thing, baffling everybody around who didn't know the thing could fly. 3. After the initial freakout, everyone shifts into 'oh, this is really nice' 4. "Wait poo poo how do we steer!?" 5. Immediately crash into the ocean in a wild panic. Too many people in video games immediately know how to operate complex vehicles they've never seen before, it's really refreshing to see an immediate floundering disaster because it turns out flying's actually hard. Cleretic has a new favorite as of 16:36 on Oct 23, 2020 |
# ? Oct 23, 2020 16:32 |
|
Something neat about Rogue Galaxy is that at one point there is a story branch - a dungeon on each of three previously visited planets for you to explore so you can move on with the story. Each dungeon ties into the themes of that world: Jiraika: Their story overall is one of stifling oneself and ones community with restrictive rules that only serve to tear people apart as people who break them are banished. - Jiraika is preventing any progress by banishing anyone who gets inventive, so they are stuck in a semi-permanent rut until they decide to work together, however it's getting harder as time goes by because most of the outcasts don't care about the other villagers - they are continuing their research mostly out of spite to the village and hope that they can make something better despite the efforts of their peers. In the revisit dungeon Leo King was literally prevented from growing into his own person, being kept as a permanent toddler by his mother. Vedan: Vedan's main story is one of misery - there are no happy endings or satisfying resolutions, everyone is either stuck or dead except for the party member and no one has any real prospects anymore, and no one even gets a good death, just a bunch of backstabbing and ambushes. In that vein, even the dungeon doesn't have a satisfying conclusion either except the beast who was befriended by the children in the area finally getting closure - there is no epic boss fight, even the midboss against Seed ends with a whimper, and the children are left alone to fend for themselves. Zerard: the third dungeon's theme is this - the flame ghost guys are you - trapped in a grudgematch between people for a cause you don't care about while you just try to move on with your life. The ghosts died in a pointless war, more annoyed with their princes' inability to deal with their poo poo, and in the initial visit, you are unable to get your license renewed because local drama keeps getting in the way, forcing you to deal with their poo poo. I thought that was interesting.
|
# ? Oct 23, 2020 18:05 |
|
Ziggurat 2 went into early access yesterday, and I like that whenever you get something new its always there among the random stuff you can pick for your loadout so you can try it out right away on your next mission.
|
# ? Oct 23, 2020 18:41 |
|
I must be remembering Rogue Galaxy wrong, because iirc it was a stale, boring grindy game with stilted combat and lame visual design.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 02:47 |
|
Sandwich Anarchist posted:I must be remembering Rogue Galaxy wrong, because iirc it was a stale, boring grindy game with stilted combat and lame visual design.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 03:03 |
|
Sandwich Anarchist posted:I must be remembering Rogue Galaxy wrong, because iirc it was a stale, boring grindy game with stilted combat and lame visual design. My box is sitting a few feet away from me, and you're both correct. Re-experience it through an appreciative LP and it's great. Play ot yourself and smash through a short podcast. Like the History of Rome, Byzantium, and Revolutions in order.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 03:11 |
|
To be fair, Vedan's story is pretty okay for a detective noir thing, and that's at least partly off the English VA performance. The rest of the story is just determined to smash its face into every single generic RPG cliche it can to try and form them into some cohesive whole, while hoping nobody sees all the bits of the Star Wars scripts they carefully edited to look original. And I say that as someone who likes the game.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 03:35 |
|
Sandwich Anarchist posted:I must be remembering Rogue Galaxy wrong, because iirc it was a stale, boring grindy game with stilted combat and lame visual design. Are you new to BioEnchanted?
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 03:57 |
|
Rogue Galaxy was the biggest load of crap to my Dark Cloud 2 loving 16-year-old self. * In any game that's considerably long and has combat, what methods are approriate to stop the player from spamming the same moves over and over again? Devil May Cry will let you pass but give you a poor score for being boring. The good Arkham games force you to adapt with curated combat encounters. You have to decide who to punch on the fly when there's a shield-guy, knife-dude, gun-man, lard-rear end, and taser-face in the mix. 90% of the fun in Horizon is stripping off a robot-dino's weapons and armour as well as laying on the status-effects. Most Obsidian games let you bypass encounters with diplomacy and stealth. The Witcher 3 and Reboot Assassins' Creeds fall into this pit because of the sheer length of their games when your own arsenal isnt that varied.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 09:45 |
|
A semi-related thing that still bothers me: Rogue Galaxy: A PS2 JRPG that's famously pretty slow and grindy, that was remastered in 2015. Rogue Legacy: A Castlevania-imitating roguelike that's known for being kind of unpleasantly grindy, first released in 2013 but got some console ports in 2014 and 2015 that got it decent recognition. Rebel Galaxy: A space sim that's very slow and patient but in a genre where that's generally a good quality, released in 2015. I've never heard one of these three titles and been correct about which one is being referred to first-time.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 10:51 |
|
Cleretic posted:A semi-related thing that still bothers me: I’m pretty sure every time I’ve seen any of these names posted I immediately thought “Star Wars game” and skimmed ahead
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 10:58 |
|
I remember in the biggest fights and the challenge modes in Arkham City, the weapon-breaking disarm move is your best friend because otherwise it's relatively easy to beat up one knife, gun or shield mook but then another one will pick it up. That might be one of the things that makes you really feel like Batman in those games- you have to fight smart.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 11:37 |
|
Origins mucked it up by not letting you cancel your attacks, then giving you a complete game-breaker that trivialises the last third. Knight of course gave the Batmobile it's own combat-system and skill-tree, and the whole experience never rises above narcoleptic.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 11:59 |
|
Batman being able to move cancel like he has innate fighting game tech is never not hilarious
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 11:59 |
|
I replayed Rogue Galaxy within the last year or so, and a few parts of it are straight-up garbage. Unfortunately these are parts like, well, all combat past the second planet and also the plot in general. Like, the final part of the game feels completely out of place and just tacked on. But yeah the combat.is what turned me off from a bunch of the game. Enemies that hit repeatedly (multiple times per second), juggling you, with no invincibility frames? Great. One combo and you're pretty much dead. Turns combat into just using your special attacks until everything is dead. I like a lot about it, like the way you power up your guys or the weapon combination system (though it's not as good as Dark Cloud's). But ugh that combat.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 15:16 |
|
I'm close to the end of the game and i'm still enjoying it, I'm finding the bosses kind of interesting. Also the FMV with Jaster and Seed trying to solve the puzzle to unlock the labyrinth was pretty cool.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 15:51 |
|
Playing through sleeping dogs again and one of the options for face costume is a face mask. Wei is doing his part to prevent the spread! Of covid, not violence. And Wei hates dogeyes. At the start when they're talking about Ming getting in with dogeyes Wei's immediate reaction is "what? You want me to make an example of dogeyes??" He really wants any excuse to go after him. ilmucche has a new favorite as of 18:49 on Oct 24, 2020 |
# ? Oct 24, 2020 17:12 |
|
Cleretic posted:A semi-related thing that still bothers me: I've played two out of three of these games and I still have the same reaction. I've been playing through the new harder NG+ modes in Nioh 2 and there's a little thing that doesn't come up much that I appreciate quite a bit. Sometimes, usually towards the end of the campaign or the end of one of the DLCs, Nioh will do a thing where you beat a boss and then a second, bigger boss with jump into the arena like a WWE run-in. If you die at that point and run back to the boss arena, the game just skips over the first boss and lets you go straight to the big guy. Souls-like and similar action games usually don't give you that kind of pseudo-checkpoint . It's very nice to not have to stomp over Chumpsuke Threemoves every time you need to retry the actual challenge.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 20:03 |
|
Inspector Gesicht posted:Rogue Galaxy was the biggest load of crap to my Dark Cloud 2 loving 16-year-old self. middle Earth games have a similar thing but seem to mix it up pretty well, except for the DLC stuff on the recent ones where your tactics are limited to the character you're playing.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 20:53 |
|
ilmucche posted:Playing through sleeping dogs again and one of the options for face costume is a face mask. Wei is doing his part to prevent the spread! Of covid, not violence. Dogeyes is why he went back to HK in the first place, wasn’t he?
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 20:55 |
|
Cleretic posted:A semi-related thing that still bothers me: I hear Rogue Galaxy and think of Freedom Planet, a Sonic the Hedgehog-inspired platformer.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 21:31 |
|
Cleretic posted:A semi-related thing that still bothers me: I think Rogue Galaxy just got a PS2 on PS4 port, it wasn’t a full remaster.
|
# ? Oct 24, 2020 21:35 |
|
Scaramouche posted:middle Earth games have a similar thing but seem to mix it up pretty well, except for the DLC stuff on the recent ones where your tactics are limited to the character you're playing. I do like that unlike Arkham, dealing with special enemy types isn't just 'dodge and disarm' but having to actually use different methods and attacks- shield orcs you can attack head on to break the shields but need to dodge their attacks, while berserkers will counter your attacks but are vulnerable to your counters in turn. (the instant-kill counter is one of the best skills in the game)
|
# ? Oct 25, 2020 02:55 |
|
Really liking Franklin's special ability in GTAV, basically a bullet time meter you can activate while driving. Careening along at high speed in my clumsy panel van, then suddenly using it to weave gracefully through a crowded traffic jam and evade the folks chasing me is pretty
|
# ? Oct 25, 2020 19:11 |
|
|
# ? Jun 8, 2024 15:21 |
|
My dorm mate in college played through Rogue Galaxy and seemed like to like it. I tried it later on PS2 and again on PS4 but it never hooked me for the long run. One thing I really liked was the crafting system, which was like a Zachtronics game before those took off. https://youtu.be/5RfjuymHeaA
|
# ? Oct 25, 2020 19:40 |