Mini Reviews
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Mr. Johnson
- Mr Flibbles

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- Joined: August 10th, 2006, 10:58
- Location: belgium
Well I'm definitely not the only one who had them. For example http://forums.steampowered.com/forums/s ... ad+problem
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Mr. Johnson
- Mr Flibbles

- Posts: 4957
- Joined: August 10th, 2006, 10:58
- Location: belgium
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FatherJack
- Site Owner

- Posts: 9597
- Joined: May 16th, 2005, 15:31
- Location: Coventry, UK
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Kinda Diablo/Sacred-ish walking around click-to-move overhead view until the actual combat where it switches to turn-based strategy on a hex grid.FatherJack wrote:King's Bounty: The Legend
I love turn-based fantasy games in the Final Fantasy mould, but for some reason* hex grids freak me out and square ones don't. As such, Wild Arms 4 upset me beyond what is reasonable, as did this game. Actually it's annoyingly fiddly selecting what you want to do in combat, with the slightest click-inacurracy causing you to trot right around the enemy instead of attacking then standing in the next sq..er..hexagon.

*Hex grids? Where you got evaporated by a vortex you could not see for taking a wrong step? On TV at kids-time when you were in primary school?
Liking it so far. Every time I've thought stuff like "bah, manually transporting this stuff is a bit of a shag" up pops the option to establish an automatic trade route. This looks to be the game Grand Ages Rome should have been, the one I've been looking for as a decent city-building successor to Pharaoh/Caesar IV. Good tutorial and fun scenarios have kept me plenty entertained so far without yet trying the real meat of the campaign mode.FatherJack wrote:1701 A.D.
Last edited by FatherJack on May 9th, 2009, 2:36, edited 1 time in total.
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buzzmong
- Weighted Storage Cube

- Posts: 7167
- Joined: February 26th, 2007, 17:26
- Location: Middle England, nearish Cov
Yes, slightly before my time growing up in the 90's, but I know the program, had a space type feel about it, was very 80's. Name escapes me.FatherJack wrote:*Hex grids? Where you got evaporated by a vortex you could not see for taking a wrong step? On TV at kids-time when you were in primary school?
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FatherJack
- Site Owner

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FatherJack
- Site Owner

- Posts: 9597
- Joined: May 16th, 2005, 15:31
- Location: Coventry, UK
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Well, Plants vs Zombies whet my appetite for a little more up-to-date tower defense and Defense Grid: The Awakening has been an excellent purchase.
It's more like the traditional tower defense popularised by Warcraft III, but you get an isometric 3D view of the route.

You start with almost nothing each round and build/upgrade towers on pre-set hardpoints with varying abilities/ranges to stop the nasties nicking your energy cores, getting more money to buy stuff with each kill. Usually they have to traverse the set path twice, but later there are one-way routes and the option to direct their route using the towers themselves.
Each level doesn't take that long and you get a completely new map to play on each time you progress, instead of an infinitely-increasing number of enemies on the same one.
Nothing that hasn't been done before, but it's done pretty nicely - the interface is very slick and while not quite GLaDOS your computer companion voice-over is midly amusing, if a little repetitive. Not bad for £14, a bargain at half that, but an absolute steal for £3.50 in the Steam sale.
It's more like the traditional tower defense popularised by Warcraft III, but you get an isometric 3D view of the route.

You start with almost nothing each round and build/upgrade towers on pre-set hardpoints with varying abilities/ranges to stop the nasties nicking your energy cores, getting more money to buy stuff with each kill. Usually they have to traverse the set path twice, but later there are one-way routes and the option to direct their route using the towers themselves.
Each level doesn't take that long and you get a completely new map to play on each time you progress, instead of an infinitely-increasing number of enemies on the same one.
Nothing that hasn't been done before, but it's done pretty nicely - the interface is very slick and while not quite GLaDOS your computer companion voice-over is midly amusing, if a little repetitive. Not bad for £14, a bargain at half that, but an absolute steal for £3.50 in the Steam sale.
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FatherJack
- Site Owner

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1701 A.D.
Still enjoying the scenarios, not been forced into combat yet (although it's been an option) but the latest one has had someone declare war on me.
I think I can still get around it with spying, but might have to rethink as I haven't built at all in my game, thinking it was a Fedex mission.
Still enjoying the scenarios, not been forced into combat yet (although it's been an option) but the latest one has had someone declare war on me.
I think I can still get around it with spying, but might have to rethink as I haven't built at all in my game, thinking it was a Fedex mission.
Farcry 2 (Again)...What Berk Originally Said
Not really a mini review since it's coming up for a year old already, but i just picked it up cos I fancied a fairly mindless but 'open' shooty game. Very pretty, nice enough story, reasonably openish...although it's more of a pretence at being open with some cleverly designed channeling by the terrain. Missions so far are fairly varied, though respawns after clearing guard posts are too fast. I can see how it'd become empty very quickly if they didn't, but it does feel as if your latest killing spree went completely unnoticed.
Fire is awesome, but I do get a bit fed up of the console/arcade insistance on having exploding barrels fucking everywhere. Who in their right minds goes to all the trouble to set up a defensive strongpoint then surrounds themselves with exploding barrels and gas canisters?
I'm quite enjoying it, but so far I feel that STALKER still beats it for 'openish' shooter type game. Now if they put FC2 together with all the toys from Flashpoint, I'd probably wet my pants.
Not really a mini review since it's coming up for a year old already, but i just picked it up cos I fancied a fairly mindless but 'open' shooty game. Very pretty, nice enough story, reasonably openish...although it's more of a pretence at being open with some cleverly designed channeling by the terrain. Missions so far are fairly varied, though respawns after clearing guard posts are too fast. I can see how it'd become empty very quickly if they didn't, but it does feel as if your latest killing spree went completely unnoticed.
Fire is awesome, but I do get a bit fed up of the console/arcade insistance on having exploding barrels fucking everywhere. Who in their right minds goes to all the trouble to set up a defensive strongpoint then surrounds themselves with exploding barrels and gas canisters?
I'm quite enjoying it, but so far I feel that STALKER still beats it for 'openish' shooter type game. Now if they put FC2 together with all the toys from Flashpoint, I'd probably wet my pants.
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FatherJack
- Site Owner

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Restaurant Empire 2
Exactly the same game, right down to the cutscenes as the first game, but with slightly better graphics (still no widescreen) another school of food (German!), more themes for decor and an additional scenario where you run a caek shop instead of a restaurant.
I really enjoyed the first one, but this is a bit disappointing as a new release after so long, it's really just an expansion in terms of the new content.
It's quirky and fiddly at times and you have to really have a genuine interest in what you're trying to achieve to get into it. Still, I put a lot of hours into it.
At £17 it's not massively expensive, but you really might as well grab the original at £2.75 to see if you like it.
Exactly the same game, right down to the cutscenes as the first game, but with slightly better graphics (still no widescreen) another school of food (German!), more themes for decor and an additional scenario where you run a caek shop instead of a restaurant.
I really enjoyed the first one, but this is a bit disappointing as a new release after so long, it's really just an expansion in terms of the new content.
It's quirky and fiddly at times and you have to really have a genuine interest in what you're trying to achieve to get into it. Still, I put a lot of hours into it.
At £17 it's not massively expensive, but you really might as well grab the original at £2.75 to see if you like it.
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HereComesPete
- Throbbing Cupcake

- Posts: 10249
- Joined: February 17th, 2007, 23:05
- Location: The maleboge
£17 for a re-release with a few add ons? That's a bit cheeky!
I bought mount and blade and kotor for 2 for £15 on game!
Oh yeah, mount and blade really is rather good for riding around on horsies and smashing massive axes into peoples faces until your dude is covered in red. It could truly be epic with a level of involvement that just hasn't arrived yet. It has loads of mission types, like fighting a lord for a lady's honour, assassinating dissenting rebel types, besieging castles, fighting in jousting tournaments, pillaging villages, collecting cattle, upgrading the towns you're lord of etc. And they keep adding more stuff to it.
You all know kotor, I just couldn't find my old copy and figured for £7.50 it was worth buying again. It's still great. I've got a few extra planets and costumes and such to tart it up a bit. Excellent story still.
I bought mount and blade and kotor for 2 for £15 on game!
Oh yeah, mount and blade really is rather good for riding around on horsies and smashing massive axes into peoples faces until your dude is covered in red. It could truly be epic with a level of involvement that just hasn't arrived yet. It has loads of mission types, like fighting a lord for a lady's honour, assassinating dissenting rebel types, besieging castles, fighting in jousting tournaments, pillaging villages, collecting cattle, upgrading the towns you're lord of etc. And they keep adding more stuff to it.
You all know kotor, I just couldn't find my old copy and figured for £7.50 it was worth buying again. It's still great. I've got a few extra planets and costumes and such to tart it up a bit. Excellent story still.
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FatherJack
- Site Owner

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NoFatherJack wrote:Is there a mod which fixes my inability to hit anything while mounted? I wasn't able to even complete the tutorial.
Try getting a longer weapon (twss), look down at the guy who's face you're smashing in and let go the swing just a fraction early. I find it helps to deliberately look to the right before starting the swing because of the way the swing direction thing works, then click and hold until in range.
Failing that, get a Knight's Lance (or jousting lance until you can find one) and a heavy charger. Do NOT swing with a lance, just gallop at full speed towards them and you'll automagically couch the lance. Lance and horsey in faice will on shot anything, and is especially effective at riding down a line of enemy archers.




