Every time I go back to Red Dead this happens, and it sucks cause the first bit is a slog.Ever tried reloading an old save on a game you haven't played in ages...and are completely lost?
I'm experiencing that right now with Red Dead Redemption 2. Think I'll have to start from scratch. Which sucks because I was about 50% completed. I'd made it to Chapter 4, where you hit your first city. But I've forgotten everything. The controls, my progress, what everything does, the story, everything.
Every time I go back to Skyrim. Every. Time.Ever tried reloading an old save on a game you haven't played in ages...and are completely lost?
I'm experiencing that right now with Red Dead Redemption 2. Think I'll have to start from scratch. Which sucks because I was about 50% completed. I'd made it to Chapter 4, where you hit your first city. But I've forgotten everything. The controls, my progress, what everything does, the story, everything.
And it's worse with games that have an unusual control scheme, or complex mechanics. Going back to an old FPS game is one thing, but going back to something like Guacamelee, when you've forgotten all the tutorials and combo moves, is something else. Even something like Torchlight 2, where I know all the basics, if I've forgotten how my specific build plays best, it's a fumbling nightmare until I remember.Ever tried reloading an old save on a game you haven't played in ages...and are completely lost?
I'm experiencing that right now with Red Dead Redemption 2. Think I'll have to start from scratch. Which sucks because I was about 50% completed. I'd made it to Chapter 4, where you hit your first city. But I've forgotten everything. The controls, my progress, what everything does, the story, everything.
The last time this happened to me was in Divinity: Original Sin 2. I wasn't lost in terms of the story, I could easily recognize where I was in the story because it was a very distinctive location. Instead, I'd completely forgotten what my characters' build strategies were. DOS2 allows players to come up with some really creative and esoteric builds and strategies, but the downside of using these weird builds is that if you don't remember what your approach was, it'll just look like a random mishmash of powers and spells. "Why the hell does this guy have a bunch of necromancer powers coupled with fire magic? What's with the dwarf using nothing but grenades? Why does my main spellcaster have no offensive spells memorized? And which among my party is meant to be the tank?"Ever tried reloading an old save on a game you haven't played in ages...and are completely lost?
I'm experiencing that right now with Red Dead Redemption 2. Think I'll have to start from scratch. Which sucks because I was about 50% completed. I'd made it to Chapter 4, where you hit your first city. But I've forgotten everything. The controls, my progress, what everything does, the story, everything.
Unlocked the "gravity gun" and made it a bit past the first boss. What I've learned:I've started playing Control because it's one of the "free" games with Prime for Amazon Luna this month. I'm highly skeptical about streaming game services, especially the bad directions they could take the industry, but I am curious about their current state, and since I already have Control through Prime Gaming giving away a GOG copy a while back, this seems like the perfect opportunity to compare a game that is taxing on my old system, to the cloud version, which can enable more graphical bells and whistles, but is limited by streaming latency and compression.
I'm also curious about how well Luna works with Steam Input, since everyone knows I love my Steam Controller. (Control is not ideal in that aspect, since it does not play nice with mixed mouse and gamepad inputs. It has a minor freakout if mouse movement happens at the same time as any controller inputs, so I'm using a full mouse & keyboard layout.)
If anyone is interested in hearing about Luna, or has specific questions, I'll go into detail after I've spent some time with the game, but if no one cares I don't know if I'll say a lot.
I own it but haven't touched it in years. I was waiting for it to be out of Early Access. Which it us now, obviously. If you want someone to play it with sometime, lemme know. I have a very vague idea of how it works.Picked up "Raft" during the survival games sale on steam.
Playing it multiplayer when nobody knows how anything works is a chaotic recipe for starvation.
Also that shark is SUCH an asshole!
Heh, it is still buggy, though. When I join someone else's game the very first thing I have to do is take my hook off my hotbar and put it in my inventory, then close my inventory, and open it again and put my hook back on my bar. If I don't do that though it won't work ever.I own it but haven't touched it in years. I was waiting for it to be out of Early Access. Which it us now, obviously. If you want someone to play it with sometime, lemme know. I have a very vague idea of how it works.
You know how it works, but do you know how it breaks?I own it but haven't touched it in years. I was waiting for it to be out of Early Access. Which it us now, obviously. If you want someone to play it with sometime, lemme know. I have a very vague idea of how it works.
PS Plus Extra, the second level. The first level seems to be what the original Plus did. Premium, the top level, includes the old PS Now content.I had to buy Stray. Maybe I wasn’t patient enough. May I ask what level of the PS membership you have?
My 25 year old cousin absolutely loves his. It's become his primary gaming platform.I just got an email that my steam deck is available if I still want it.
Dies anyone have one? Are they awesome or silly?
MINES ON THE WAY!!!I just got an email that my steam deck is available if I still want it.
Dies anyone have one? Are they awesome or silly?
I have been following /r/SteamDeck very closely, since I wish I had the money to spend on a Deck. The general consensus seems to be that it's amazing, if it runs the games you want to play, and it runs a lot of games pretty well. You can see what games from your library are "Deck Verified" here. Bear in mind that some users have reported issues with Verified games, but on the flip side there are many Unsupported and untested games that actually work fine, or can be made to work with little effort. (And that's not even getting into using the Deck for emulation. The Deck can run some Switch games better than the Switch does, among many other systems.)Dies anyone have one? Are they awesome or silly?
Well, Clansfolk has a demo and tutorial. You could play for free and see if it floats your boat.I am stressed out right now re: work and I was considering that or the cat one. Maybe I need both!
I think I'm the only one here that physically has one at the moment and this is the most comprehensive and accurate breakdown though I will add battery life is kinda bunk depending on what you're playing. Though that can be lengthened by dropping settings down and mitigated by a power bank, and it's no worse than you'd expect out of a gaming laptop anyway.I have been following /r/SteamDeck very closely, since I wish I had the money to spend on a Deck. The general consensus seems to be that it's amazing, if it runs the games you want to play, and it runs a lot of games pretty well. You can see what games from your library are "Deck Verified" here. Bear in mind that some users have reported issues with Verified games, but on the flip side there are many Unsupported and untested games that actually work fine, or can be made to work with little effort. (And that's not even getting into using the Deck for emulation. The Deck can run some Switch games better than the Switch does, among many other systems.)
One of the major reasons for games to be Unsupported is having cut scenes or other pre-rendered video that is encoded in formats Valve doesn't have the rights to to distribute software for in all countries, so they can't pack in those decoders with Proton. However, there is Proton GloriousEggroll (named after the coder who maintains it) that includes expanded codec support, among other tweaks. Installing Proton GE isn't hard, and helps make a lot of games, like the Batman Arkham series, run on Deck.
People who like it:
There are a lot of very satisfied Deck users out there, playing hundreds of different games. Even recent and fairly demanding stuff like Elden Ring and Spider-Man Remastered.
- Value the portability, or being able to play on the couch when the TV is in use. I've seen a number of posts from parents who say things like "I never get a chance to game on my PC, but this lets me sneak in game time while still being a parent."
- Have the Steam Deck as their first gaming PC, or as a return to PC gaming. There is nothing else on the market that performs as well as the Steam Deck at it's price point. You'd either have to buy used, or spend well more than $400 to get a desktop PC with more performance than a Steam Deck, and that's not figuring in the cost of monitor, keyboard, speakers, etc. Valve must be selling Decks at cost, or somewhere close to that.
- Are happy with 720p, medium graphics, 40 - 60fps
- Like the many and varied input options the Steam Deck provides. The Deck is unmatched in it's collection of buttons, touchpads, gyro and the configuration software to use it all.
People who are disappointed in it generally:
- Want competitive online multi-player. SteamOS / Linux has some compatibility issues with anti-cheat software. (Are we anti-cheat yet?)
- Already have high end PCs, and only want to play in high resolution, ultra graphics, 60+fps, etc.
- Expect everything to just work, and that's not always the case with the Steam Deck (though only a little more so than PC gaming in general).
- Expected the docked experience to be as seamless as docking the Switch. Right now there are a few issues with using an external monitor on the Steam Deck.*
* There are a few main issues with docking the Steam Deck. Most notably the "Game Mode" doesn't let you choose an output resolution, causing it to auto-select 4k30 when using a dock that doesn't support 4k60 output. This limits the system to 30fps. Games can still be run at any resolution, but they get upscaled to the interface's resolution, and even when connected to a dock/TV combo that works at 60Hz+, there can be performance issues when scaling games to 4k. This can be solved by using Desktop Mode, but that means giving up system-wide FSR and some of Game Mode's other benefits.
The other issue with docked play is that Game Mode has a bug with mouse support. Trying to play FPS games with mouse & keyboard results in borked mouse input. Again, this can be solved by using Desktop Mode. Docked useage seems to be an afterthought by Valve, and they're still doing a lot of work on SteamOS to get everything working.
For instance, since the Steam Deck launched, Valve has added a user defined refresh rate mode that allows the deck to run the screen at a lower Hz. So you can run at 40hz and 40fps without the frame pacing issues of running 60Hz/40fps (40 fps is halfway between 30 and 60 in terms of frame timing. 33.3ms / 25ms / 16.6ms per frame respectively.) So games that can't run at a constant 60fps on the Deck don't have to fall all the way down to 30fps.
I have power banks for my Nintendo when I travel.I think I'm the only one here that physically has one at the moment and this is the most comprehensive and accurate breakdown though I will add battery life is kinda bunk depending on what you're playing. Though that can be lengthened by dropping settings down and mitigated by a power bank, and it's no worse than you'd expect out of a gaming laptop anyway.
Otherwise it's a really slick machine.