I like them bhamv. I'd give them a shotHmm, the Witcher games are tempting me. How good are they?
No kidding. I barely got anywhere on the Revenge of the Titans achievement. I assumed the purpose of these achievements was to get people to play games they might not have otherwise. Setting an achievement that requires advanced knowledge of the game kind of defeats that.Some of those achievements are ridiculously hard.
Better than a walk-through is letting someone else do all the hard work. Download a saved game and come in just at the last Yeti.I'm consulting a walk-through for the RotT achievement, see if some strategy will help me win, but that'll have to wait for later.
Yes. Shooby dooby shamma whamma zip zoopity bop puddin' pop.Also, I'm thinking of getting Revenge of the Titans. Any thoughts from anyone?
I've only played a very little, and I found the graphics to be a little over-stylized. It was hard to tell what units were what. They all look kind of similar.Any relevant or helpful thougths on the game?
And they also introduce users to the various features of Steam (Facebook integration, recommendations, inventory, trading, screenshots, wishlists, and it's rumored tomorrow's achievement might be to turn on Steam Guard.) Speaking of wishlists, getting people to put 10 games on their list also broadcasts those games to their friends who then see more games to want in the future. There are so many layers to this, and Valve keeps adding little twists and tweaks with each major event. It's really quite an impressive way to get people to not only buy games, but also invest themselves in the system and become familiar with what Steam does besides just sell games.The marketing folks at Valve are some sort of mad geniouses. This whole campaign is beyond brilliant. By tying the achievements to the lesser played titles, they are making money hand over fist even with the discounts.
Except a lot of these games are indie titles, developed by companies that have very strong relationships with Valve. It's why Killing Floor and Super Meat Boy were in the Summer Scavenger Hunt, as well as the Great Gift Pile, and why The Binding of Isaac (from the makers of SMB) was on the list despite being from a company that already has a title in the achievement list. Valve's not promoting lesser played titles, they are cultivating sales for the indie community they constantly snipe talent from.The marketing folks at Valve are some sort of mad geniouses. This whole campaign is beyond brilliant. By tying the achievements to the lesser played titles, they are making money hand over fist even with the discounts.
Or both.Except a lot of these games are indie titles, developed by companies that have very strong relationships with Valve. It's why Killing Floor and Super Meat Boy were in the Summer Scavenger Hunt, as well as the Great Gift Pile, and why The Binding of Isaac (from the makers of SMB) was on the list despite being from a company that already has a title in the achievement list. Valve's not promoting lesser played titles, they are cultivating sales for the indie community they constantly snipe talent from.
A positive way of looking at it is promoting people who are loyal to Valve and Steam. It's basically saying "If you make a game and promote it on Steam, you can be sure we'll do everything we can to help people see and play that game."Except a lot of these games are indie titles, developed by companies that have very strong relationships with Valve. It's why Killing Floor and Super Meat Boy were in the Summer Scavenger Hunt, as well as the Great Gift Pile, and why The Binding of Isaac (from the makers of SMB) was on the list despite being from a company that already has a title in the achievement list. Valve's not promoting lesser played titles, they are cultivating sales for the indie community they constantly snipe talent from.