You'll get the ending you deserve... but not the ending you need right now. But you'll like it, because you can take it...Goddamn you Bioshok.Why cant I put you down? I am bracing myself for a tragic ending,and I hate tragic endings. :/
Hope I will be proven wrong.
That dosnt make any sense...at all...You'll get the ending you deserve... but not the ending you need right now. But you'll like it, because you can take it...
Your behavior in the game (regarding harvesting or saving the Little Sisters) dictates your ending.That dosnt make any sense...at all...
What Bowie said, plus bhamv's trying to pull a Dark Knight on you.That dosnt make any sense...at all...
That was 10 minutes ago. Is your head still hanging?Yeah, and failed miserably at it.
I shall hang my head in shame for a period no less than five minutes.
Its definitely a game for a special type of person, same as with Arma2. The UI and inventory management is still pretty goofy, but its less wonky than Arma2. They definitely did a better job with this one.How is Arma3? I played the second one a bunch... but sucked at it for the most part. Still liked the insane realism though.
Bastion's gameplay is fun, but to me it's the narrative that really sells it. The story's solid and the voice acting/music really tell the story.Playing Bastion.
It's... okay. It's not bad, but so far I'm not sure why people praise it so much. Maybe I need to get further into the game. (I've just started collecting shards)
Fortunately, the moments when you have to think of which button to press are usually not combat-intensive sections.Darksiders: Better than I expected. I'm only an hour or so in, but I'm liking it a lot more than I thought I would. There are a lot of controls to memorize. They're easy even though not exactly intuitive.
Those aren't the buttons I'm having problems with. Using set powers is probably the worst. Hold L1, and then hit one of the shape buttons. It would make more sense to hold L1 and use the D-pad, holding L1 being the changer between using the D-pad for changing weapons or using a power. Remapping my main command buttons to use these occasional powers, especially in a frantic fight, is kind of disorienting. t's not a big deal. If I'm going to be targeting an enemy, the purpose is usually to dodge circles around them, every now and then coming in to slash them with my sword. The Earthcaller is also nice for stalling the bigger bastards.Fortunately, the moments when you have to think of which button to press are usually not combat-intensive sections.
"Ok, War, I want you to push this block. No, don't slash it with your sword. No, don't try to pick it up. No, don't jump on it, not yet."
Oh ok, I played on PC so while the control scheme is similar, there are also more options available.Those aren't the buttons I'm having problems with. Using set powers is probably the worst. Hold L1, and then hit one of the shape buttons. It would make more sense to hold L1 and use the D-pad, holding L1 being the changer between using the D-pad for changing weapons or using a power. Remapping my main command buttons to use these occasional powers, especially in a frantic fight, is kind of disorienting. t's not a big deal. If I'm going to be targeting an enemy, the purpose is usually to dodge circles around them, every now and then coming in to slash them with my sword. The Earthcaller is also nice for stalling the bigger bastards.
I can't say for the whole game since I'm not very far ... but yeah, the power I have right now sucks. I saved it up for a big monster since I thought it would be something awesome, but then a few little spikes popped up. Sad, War. Very sad. He does better with the sword. I like that the weapons level up through use, not out of me having to collect thousands of red orbs a la God of War.However, I do recall I didn't use my powers all that often. ("Hold Capslock and press 1 through 4") Basically I dodged and slashed my way through the whole game. Attacking was pretty much 1-button combat all the way through.
I'd get it. I'd have called it the successor to Thief if that Thief reboot hadn't just been announced. Lots of fun, at least two endings, and more than one way to play.Who wants to buy me Dishonored while it's on sale?
Fallout 3 was one of my favorite recent games. The mood is excellent. The great thing about Bethesda games is that you can play them however you like. Just don't level up too quickly or you'll get stomped. Remember, the bad guys level up with you.Okay, so I finished Portal 2, basked in it for a day, and then put in the Fallout 3 GOTY disc (I've got two days of kids at grandma's house and have to make the most of it. Now, I look to you HF for advice:
As a working father, I don't have a ton of time to play games (hence the frustration with Arkham City's Riddler Chores). However, as a Fallout 1 & 2 fan, I want to slowly explore, looking into every distress signal and having every conversation I can, to the point where my stats teeter on Godlike by the time I'm done with the game. So, does Fallout 3 follow the pattern of the others? Should I be putting of the main story line in favor of exploration and build up? Or should I just go after dad and hope for the best?
I understand the "not a lot of time to play games" being a dad myself - I just recently got Torchlight II and have been trying to play that in my "spare time" - which isn't much. I can't play any MMO or other online games much so I pretty much stick to single player, offline games - especially ones that I can save/pause whenever needed.As a working father, I don't have a ton of time to play games (hence the frustration with Arkham City's Riddler Chores). However, as a Fallout 1 & 2 fan, I want to slowly explore, looking into every distress signal and having every conversation I can, to the point where my stats teeter on Godlike by the time I'm done with the game. So, does Fallout 3 follow the pattern of the others? Should I be putting of the main story line in favor of exploration and build up? Or should I just go after dad and hope for the best?
That's kind of all over the place and hard to narrow down, so I'm just going to say Deus Ex: Human RevolutionI understand the "not a lot of time to play games" being a dad myself - I just recently got Torchlight II and have been trying to play that in my "spare time" - which isn't much. I can't play any MMO or other online games much so I pretty much stick to single player, offline games - especially ones that I can save/pause whenever needed.
I haven't tried any of the Fallout series - since I like the Mass Effect series (haven't played 3 yet - currently on the fence), Torchlight I and II, Diablo II, and such, would this be a good series to try too?
That sounds more like the PS3 version.I can finally enjoy it as it was meant to be played.