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    Before Your Eyes (PC)    by   dkirschner       (Apr 14th, 2024 at 13:51:13)

    I've been looking forward to playing this, especially after playing One Hand Clapping, which had a singing mechanic. That game activates your mic and you use your voice, raising and lowering pitch, to interact with the game. Before Your Eyes was similar in that the game activates your webcam and uses your eye blinks as input. Before Your Eyes works WAY better than One Hand Clapping, and it's the better game all around. I figure that detecting blinks (yes/no) is easier than detecting notes along the range of human vocal pitch, so kudos to One Hand Clapping for trying.

    Blinking in Before Your Eyes doesn't do anything unless you do it over a prompt (mouse over the prompt, then blink to interact) or unless you do it when the metronome icon is visible, which progresses the story to the next scene. The rules are simple, and it became a game in and of itself for me to blink strategically. I imagined that at the end of A Clockwork Orange, Alex's eyes are forced open so that he could successfully complete this game. At times, I felt like holding my eyes open with my fingers. This is because your eyes will get tired/dry/itchy while playing and you will screw up and blink when you don't mean to, skipping dialogue or ending a scene early. That's frustrating enough. Make sure you do the blink calibration, but I think that no matter how well you do it, it will still occasionally register some non-blinks as blinks. This really didn't happen much for me; through calibration, I think I turned the sensitivity way down, and I wonder what effect wearing glasses had. But like I said, it works surprisingly well.

    So, the game itself is narrative-heavy. It's an obvious play on the idea that a life can pass in the "blink of an eye." You're picked up by a ferryman of souls who asks you to tell the story of your life. Back in time you go to remember it: your childhood, your parents, your career, etc., blinking your way through each scene. I won't spoil the story, but there is a twist that I absolutely did not see coming (though I should have paid more attention to the mysterious dark scenes) that changes the narrative and the tone of the game. This is one you can spend time reflecting on.

    Aesthetically, it's got a simple visual presentation, sort of painterly, with some really nice piano music. The voice acting is good, with the exception of the girl-next-door (who sounds the same at 10 as she does at 40). For some reason, they also used the same voice actor for your dad and her dad, which made the one scene with her dad calling her very confusing ("Why is my dad at her house?!"). But I liked the dad and mom's performances. I was wondering through the whole game if your character was mute and/or on the spectrum because he doesn't talk--only through a typewriter later in the game--and otherwise expresses himself through his prodigious musical and artistic talents. But I think he's just a silent main character, not actually mute.

    Anyway, the game won a BAFTA for a reason. It didn't blow my mind, but it's a neat experience that's worth having. It's short too, doesn't waste your time. I'm considering incorporating it into a class.



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    Stray (PC)    by   dkirschner       (Apr 13th, 2024 at 12:00:39)

    Patrick and I have been playing this together this semester, and finished it a couple weeks ago. We were talking after beating it about despite how simple and straightforward of a game this is, it manages to be something new. Playing as a cat (and being able to do cat things like curl up and sleep, scratch things, knock objects off tables, etc., so cuuuute) was novel, and the setting and story were interesting. But really, playing as a cat. I smiled a whole lot throughout the game. The lil companion robot was cute too.

    On the other hand, I was often tired and bored while playing, and literally fell asleep during several sessions. Patrick would be making dinner or something in the kitchen, and I'd snap awake, cat walking into a wall, and I'd pretend I had not fallen asleep, and that I was just watching the cat walk into the wall and thinking. Like how my dad always used to claim he was "resting his eyes" when he'd fall asleep on the couch.

    I would not call the game exciting. It was a lot of wandering around the city and talking to robot NPCs, fetching things for them. The city is a really good-looking dystopia, and the robots are quirky, but I wish they had more dialogue. You don't get a sense that many of them have personalities besides whatever one-note thing they do. I mean, the lack of dialogue makes sense, and it's not really "dialogue" since the cat can't talk. The fact that you are a cat adds a whole layer of silly to the game. Like, why has this lil robot befriended a cat? Why are all these robots putting all their faith in a cat to save them? Cats don't understand what we're saying to them, and cats do whatever they want! Playing as a cat in a game where you're doing fetch quests (fetching is dog stuff!) and doing things to help people is very un-cat-like.

    But, you know what? The ability to play as a cat and do cat things trumps how little sense it makes, and I would play as a cat in this dystopia again. Idea for next time: more cats. And what do you think? Were there cats at the end?! Optimistically, I think so.



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    Hadean Tactics (PC)    by   jp       (Apr 7th, 2024 at 13:32:36)

    This game is supposed to be a deck-building tactical game and it sort of isn't, but very lightly is - at least in my experience so far.

    So, like CD2: Trap Master this game REALLY wears it's Slay the Spire inspirations on its sleeve. Again, there's a path you that branches and you need to pick which nodes to visit - and there's fights, boss fights, resting spots, stores, artifact/rewards, and shops. Oh, there's also "story encounters" where you make a choice that often results in a benefit and a drawback. VERY Slay the Spire - though I noticed the way the events are distributed is different and that it's much more important to plan your way through it since the paths intersect a lot less and you can, for example in my last run, set yourself up with 4 rest/upgrade a card spots in a row!

    In addition to a deck of cards you have the character you chose and two "minions" (they're all monsters) that exist on a 2D grid that's quite typical of tactical games. The enemies will spawn, you have energy to cast your cards - generally you cast your cards, unpause and wait for the timer to pause the game when it hits the threshold (7 seconds) for your hand to flush, a new hand is drawn, and you get more mana to cast spells. What isn't really tactical about it is that all the fighting on the tactical grid (which includes everyone having abilities they cast once their mana is full) happens automatically. You can't (afaik) give orders to anyone. At best, if you have the right spells, you can move creatures around (your own or enemy), but they then move back to whatever it is they want to do (e.g. attack the nearest enemy).

    One of my runs used a character that had access to "trap" cards which are pretty neat since you lay them on the grid and then have to trigger them (with a different card) and ALL the trap laid will trigger. Some do damage, others heal your allies, and so on. So, the game isn't tactical at all in the turn-by-turn combat and movement decision-making sense. Yes, you choose whom to roll into a fight with, which spells to cast on whom, and when to cast things. But, since you don't directly control your combat units it all feels pretty indirect.

    Where the game goes pretty wild (and above/beyond what Slay the Spire does) is that once you've cleared a run - you gain access to making your own hero - choose skills/talents from a list AND choose which spells will be available (again from a list, which only has the ones you've unlocked). So, in this sense the game has a lot, lot more options/replayability and that sort of thing. But, I'm not sure it's that much more interesting?

    Oh, there is a meta-progression. When I beat my first run a giant death/reaper creature appeared and said "ok, now you can start to make progress towards winning - you have to collect wings". And I've collected a few since, you get them from killing the stage end bosses (which is nice in that you don't have to get all the way to the end). I need to get 7 - so I wonder if I'll just have to play over and over until I randomly get the right bosses or will the game feed me different ones until I get them all? I've also unlocked a new (third) character...but I kind of don't want to use it because I want to get all the wings with the character I've made some progress with.

    I've played about 4 hours and I've really enjoyed the "decay" and "trap" mechanics... we'll see how it goes!

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    Deathloop (PS4)    by   jp       (Apr 4th, 2024 at 11:14:36)

    Argh. The longer you go without playing, the worse this game's experience becomes. This is almost entirely due to me forgetting both how to play, but also all the localized information and knowledge you pick up - like who is where, when, and so on.

    I love the idea of a "clockwork" game where you deftly navigate your way through things that happen and certain times and places - there's a sense of beauty and elegance to the choreography you develop and create (sort of like when you watch those time loop movies and see a character weave through people and places because they know what's going to happen when and they've just learned it). BUT, that beauty also creates an entry barrier - at least a psychological one for me, because the game's on-ramp is past and now you're in the thick of it. But you've forgotten everything...

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    Devil May Cry 5 (PS4)    by   jp       (Apr 4th, 2024 at 11:09:05)

    So I took a break - and then came back to the game and had forgotten how to play. It took a bit to remember (I purposefully avoided looking stuff up because I wanted to see how easy it was for me to remember). So, some of the fights with V took longer than they should have - because I had forgotten that V has to "finish off" the enemies...lol.

    While I often focus (for my own personal interests) on game play and game design aspects of a game - I realized as I was playing this game that..wow, the visual design of the large enemies really is phenomenal. They're both beautiful, awesome, creepy, gross, and disgusting. It's quite the accomplishment and I really appreciated it. And, this is in the context of me playing a game that is ~7 years old and running on last gen hardware. Perhaps I haven't played enough PS5 games yet so I'm still too impressionable? Have things moved that far in terms of photorealism?

    I have decided to move on even though I realize, from the back of the box, that I'll miss out on the 3rd playable character. It's no fault or problem with DMC5...it's just that I've got too many games to play and I think I've understood enough about this game to move on to another.

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    1 : dkirschner's Blair Witch (PC)
    2 : dkirschner's Creaks (PC)
    3 : dkirschner's Before Your Eyes (PC)
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    Random

    Ori and the Blind Forest (PC)    by   dkirschner

    Excellent game, beautiful visuals, great music and sound. Challenging puzzle platforming.
    most recent entry:   Friday 1 May, 2020
    Wow, worth the wait! I should mention, I'm in gaming heaven now, not only because I have more free time and the semester is almost over, but because Microsoft has a deal on their XBox Game Pass for PC (which is in beta). It's $1 for a month, and only $4.99 monthly after that. Holy crap. I went through the 200 games in the catalog and found 16 that are on my wishlist. 16 games for $1? Or $5.99 for two months? Or $11.99 if it takes me three months? YES PLEASE.

    Ori and the Blind Forest is the first thing I downloaded to play (sequel, coming soon!). I always remember the first time I heard the game's title. I was teaching Sociology of Disability, and I was talking to someone from an organization serving people who are visually impaired. I mentioned that I had students play video games about disability and she said, "Oh like Ori and the Blind Forest?" I was like, "noted, a game about something to do with blindness." I read about it soon thereafter in PC Gamer or somewhere and that is NOT what this game is about!

    Ori and the Blind Forest is a challenging 2d platformer about restoring a "blind" (dead) natural world. It's enchanting in a Studio Ghibli way. The presentation is immaculate in every way. It's claim to fame for me will be that I had fun hunting for extra power-ups. I usually hate doing that, but traversing the world was a blast. I spent my ability points in the exploration-type skill tree branch first, which is also unusual. It's because toward the end, experience you pick up is increased. I thought, "well if I can get that quickly, then I can unlock even more skills." Sure enough, I had two of three trees maxed out by the end and the other halfway there.

    The odd thing is you don't really need many of the abilities in the skill tree. They enhance damage, or give you extra life for creating a save point--all nice things--but the abilities you need are the ones you find in the world. Even then, I didn't unlock them all. I think I was missing something called "light burst" and something that would let me activate chains that lower barriers. I did notice a chunk of the world (one area maybe) that I didn't explore, so I'm sure something useful was down there.

    So the coolest ability by far lets you propel yourself off of enemies or projectiles in the air. You can use it to get into all sorts of nooks and crannies in the map. Say a spider shoots an energy orb at you. You jump and press triangle when you're near it. An arrow appears. Ori will fly in the direction of the arrow and the energy orb will fly in the direction opposite the arrow. This means you can redirect projectiles with the move too. All the movement abilities work in conjunction; the synergy is smooth. If you're trying to reach a height, you can use this arrow move to chain propel higher. Often, you will need to slow your fall after a boost while you wait for another projectile to be shot at you so you can propel off it. So, press LT and float with your leaf as you wait to be shot at.

    There is a variety of platforming on display. Some sections focus on killing enemies, some are "outrun the water/lava/wind," some are slow and thoughtful puzzles to traverse. By far the most impressive thing about some of these platforming segments are the "single-shot" ones. Like a long scene in a movie shot in one take, these see you going from the beginning of, say, a chase sequence (the final battle with the bird is the standout) to the end in one beautiful fluid performance. You will die in this game A LOT. Death in these sequences means you've learned something to go farther next time. "Okay, next time I need to float on the wind to the right and hide under this rock while the bird swoops past." Then you die 10 seconds after that on the next attempt. "Okay, hide under the rock, then I've got to quickly propel myself up the abyss on the plants; if I go too slow, the fire spreads and kills me. Just go fast, straight up!" Repeat 20 times to beat the encounter. I loved it.

    I hope my computer will run the sequel. A lot of these Microsoft developed or published games that I can play with Game Pass are newer (Ori and the Will of the Wisps was just a month or two ago!). I'm usually playing something a few years old, so it'll be weird to play new things...if I can run them. New computer? Hopefully not yet...but I'll have Game Pass games on hold for that time if the ole' Alienware isn't up to par any time soon.

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