yuritopia

joined 4 years ago
[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 27 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Plenty of those games have quests to do for gold, I figure just cut out the gold and have quests unlock more of the shop’s gear for you rather than pay for it. You could even just rename gold to influence points or something, that way the devs could still have the players spend an amount of things for an amount of something else.

 

Plenty of games, especially strategy and simulator games, have game mechanics related to politics or economics. From Recettear’s “Capitalism Ho!” to Hearts of Iron 4’s focus trees, political descriptions can be added to flavor game mechanics, and because different game devs have endless variation in personal worldviews, these additions can be absurdly bad at times. Even if the mechanic itself is good, it can have dunk-worthy labelling. Post the worst that you can think of, even if they come from an otherwise great game.

I’ll start: In Civilization VI, different government types you choose have different slots for policy cards, which let you select political policy bonuses for your civilization. In the modern age, two of the government types you can choose are “Democracy” and “Communism”. Already this is liberal drivel conflating Communism with non-democracy and “authoritarianism”. But the policy slots for these governments are even dumber, as Democracy gets more “diplomatic” and “economic” policies, and Communism gets more “millitary” policies. Famously, America and the west (clearly what Democracy is inspired by) never destabilized the world with arms manufactoring and invasions, I guess.

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 24 points 2 months ago

looks cool to me shrug-outta-hecks

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 4 points 5 months ago

I hate how true this is lmao

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 18 points 6 months ago (1 children)

We didn’t start the fire ~ ♪

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 3 points 6 months ago

I agree with this mostly, but I think the lessons devs learned over the history of video gaming means that they become exponentially more accessable and intuitive. A game from 20 years ago (a late PS2 game) takes getting used to, but a game 20 years before 2004 (so 1984) basically requires a college course in how to play it. I’ve seen some comments online about how 2009 games are so old and obtuse and I’m like, they play almost the exact same as today’s games because developers had figured out a formula that works by then!

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 3 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Funnily enough I read that Nomura actually wanted to keep the remake very faithful to the original story. The ghosts and deviations are actually ideas from the other writers, Nojima and I-forget-the-other-guy.

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 4 points 7 months ago

Bottom right. Whispering You a Love Song. It's an actual lesbian romance story. The anime is not the most well done anime in the world (I still find it watchable though) so if you're interested the manga is more recommended.

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 7 points 8 months ago

I think they kinda made that announcement to tell people they haven't forgotten about the franchise, because there were fans upset that they were hearing nothing about it at all. But since they made it, it's now annoying that it's been so long. One of those damned if you do, damned if you don't things. I would have preferred TES 6 instead of two Fallouts in a row (4 and 76), but at least it's now their next project.

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 37 points 9 months ago

Ah, more Stormtroopers, just in time for Star Wars day.

[–] yuritopia@hexbear.net 16 points 9 months ago (6 children)

I was actually impressed by the level of RPG mechanics they put in this, the character creation alone is much more in depth than Skyrim's (although they are both still some of the lightest RPGs out there). In terms of those aspects it's better than Skyrim. But I have more fun in Skyrim than Starfield because I'm constantly engaged with the game systems: walking, leveling, finding quests and dialogue. I wish Starfield was close to Skyrim like this.

 

Anyone got any VPNs to recommend? I know there's a lot of varying quality out there. I'll appreciate any recommendations, but I'm just looking to pirate games (in U.S.) and not get a letter from my ISP, so whatever is simple and easy for that purpose.

 

I wonder what those people are up to now.

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