bin.pol.social

nuko147, do games w Simcity 3000 Retrospective/Mini Review & Screenshot Walkthrough
@nuko147@lemm.ee avatar

I remember playing it with my cousin when we were around 12 or 13 years old, acting as co-mayors. I was always focused on the environment and quality of life, while he prioritized profit - building dirty industries and raising taxes. Good times, good times.

Ignatz, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of April 13th

For the Frog, the Bell Tolls

An adventure puzzle/platformer for the Game Boy. The mechanics are fun, and has you transforming between a human, frog, and snake to get through various areas. I’m about an hour in and the puzzles are fairly simple, but the charming writing and art design carry the game for me. I’d recommend it if you’re looking for something somewhat casual. I have laughed out loud a few times while playing it.

If you want to check it out, you’ll need to run it on an emulator.

  • The game is a Japan-only release, but there’s an English fan patch you can find on here
  • You’ll need the base ROM for the game, which you can find here
  • Once you download both of those, use this to mash them together and you’re good to go.
Jakeroxs, do gaming w What's a good slow paced shooter game?

Hunt Showdown

shellington, do games w Simcity 3000 Retrospective/Mini Review & Screenshot Walkthrough

Lovely retrospective. SC3000 is definitely the pinnacle of city builders. Still play it regularly.

CCAirWater, do gaming w What's a good slow paced shooter game?

Escape from Tarkov has a PVE mode now, so you dont gotta deal with the sweaties of PVP. Any of the tactical looter shooters have a slow vibe. Tarkov was intense and difficult for a long time, but my bestie was my Sherpa, so to speak, and we go into maps together and I can handle myself now. It has a hideout building aspect, so your loot goes towards something. There’s quests from the trade vendors, that all builds a lore to the game that has a lot of secrecy. I dunno a lot of it, but it’s fun to figure out. It also has weapon building, where all the weapons are able to be taken apart and sold for parts or pieced together with the parts you want. The ammo has stats on what can penetrate armor, and the armor has a plate system so you can buy or find better plates for it. There’s a durability aspect too, and weapons can jam and need to be evaluated and then clearing the malfunction. There’s bosses, too. And different factions to deal with. Many are ill equiped, and some are decked out in gear with big weapons. Your character can die with one shot if there’s no armor there. Or you can tank a bunch of shots if you’re kitted out. There’s even a flea market that’s player based. So the prices can make your character rich, if you play the market or sell stuff. Like, selling a chocolate bar can net you 100k, because they’re fast food during in-raid. Oh, and there’s a whole water + food system. So you have to find food and water to keep that going. You have to use the right meds for the right situation; splits for fractures, bandages for light bleeds, tournequits for heavy bleeds, pain killers, injector pens for status effects and medkits to heal, after you deal with all those situations. Some medkits even cover a lot of the various things, some inject pens cover various things too.

It’s pretty in-depth.

The game is based in Russia though. Your character is without a faction, despite picking one “USEC” OR “BEAR.” But that’s just how you got into the city; USEC was the corporations mercenary group, BEARs were the military. And it takes place after the fighting, your character sorta got out of the faction. Unless you do a scavenger (scav) run, everyone is unfriendly. Scavs all stick together except the boss and their goons might pop you.

It doesn’t seem to have anything to do with real politics, far as I’ve seen? But the lore deals with the corporate greed, military powers, and regular scavenger people all kinda vying for survival in a war torn city of Tarkov. It’s a weird lore, but interesting for a game and intense gunfights of fire, move, cover, fire, move, cover. Be wary of a clicking grenade and run.

BmeBenji, do gaming w What's a good slow paced shooter game?

Rainbow Six: Siege

People who play it like COD are the worst players in the game. Everything is designed to reward methodical, team-focused strategy so you can get the upper hand on people who don’t pay attention and try to rush everything.

BmeBenji, do gaming w What's a good slow paced shooter game?

You might love and hate my answer: Titanfall 2

It’s literally both of these things. Pilots play the extremely fast, twitch-shooting superhuman game while Titans play the slow-paced boots-on-the-ground heavy-weighted gameplay.

It’s the best multiplayer shooter of all time and it survives thanks to the Northstar launcher on PC

ProdigalFrog, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of April 13th

https://slrpnk.net/pictrs/image/f49cfaa3-a7f6-48c2-af85-b08f319b0b1a.jpeg

A Mind Forever Voyaging, by Infocom.

It’s an old text adventure from the 80’s with a particularly cool and oddly relevant concept: You take the role of an AI that’s been meticulously raised in a simulation to truly become a general intelligence. The reason this project was undertaken was to eventually send you, the AI, into other simulations based in the near future to test the outcomes of various political policies of the new republican government, record your interactions, and report back to the engineers who created you.

The game’s designer said that he created the game in response to the despair he felt from Ronald Reagan being elected.

I haven’t gotten super far in it, but it has an incredibly well written short story in the manual that details all the events leading up to the start of the game, and so far the game itself is unlike anything else I’ve ever played.

Megaman_EXE,

How can I play this? It sounds really interesting!

ProdigalFrog,

You can play the game here on Archive.org, or you can download a copy from that page and play it in DOSBox Staging.

Here’s all the physical documentation you’ll need, such as the short story, how to play manual, and an in-world map (you’ll have to draw your own, but it’ll give you a rough idea of the land. If you find map making tedious, you could use a map someone else made).

Lastly, you’ll need this interactive copy protection wheel when it prompts you for a combination in game, right before entering a simulation.

Good luck! :D

_cryptagion, do games w [DCSS] I did it! I touched the Orb...

Is this what English sounds like to people who don’t speak it?

BossDj, do games w Simcity 3000 Retrospective/Mini Review & Screenshot Walkthrough

Nice review! Genuinely made me want to jump back in. I know I won’t, but the nostalgia is real!

pezhore, do games w Simcity 3000 Retrospective/Mini Review & Screenshot Walkthrough

It has been over a quarter of a century since SimCity 3000 was released in 1999.

First off, rude.

Secondly, great write up. :)

Agent_Karyo,
@Agent_Karyo@lemmy.world avatar

“It has been over a quarter of a century since SimCity 3000 was released in 1999.”

First off, rude.

😜

deadcream, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of April 13th

Avowed and X4 depending on the mood. X4 started slow but I think I’ve started the process of getting the hang of the basics after 30 hours.

funkajunk, do games w A retro gaming handheld console has been amazing for me and I want to recommend it
@funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

How is it for game streaming? I’ve been loving Apollo and Artemis

cRazi_man, (edited )

I haven’t tried yet. I think there are videos on YouTube showing Moonlight working well. Don’t know about other apps. I’ve installed Steam Link expecting that WiFi 6 should give a good streaming experience.

funkajunk,
@funkajunk@lemm.ee avatar

Artemis is a fork of moonlight and has absolutely surpassed it. Steam Link is garbage compared to it, and that is not an exaggeration.

PalmTreeIsBestTree, do games w Simcity 3000 Retrospective/Mini Review & Screenshot Walkthrough

Wish it was 1999.

SweetCitrusBuzz, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of April 13th
@SweetCitrusBuzz@beehaw.org avatar

Cassette Beasts and soon Lost Records: Bloom and Rage, Tape 2

luciole,
@luciole@beehaw.org avatar

I’m playing Cassette Beasts lately too! It’s such a good monster collector. The low poly 3D+2D aesthetic is on point and it’s real cozy. They don’t hide their Pokémon inspiration but they do their own thing with it and I really like their take. It feels both kinder and more stimulating. I love that basically all battles are doubles.

SweetCitrusBuzz,
@SweetCitrusBuzz@beehaw.org avatar

Yeah. I never really got into pokémon as I didn’t like the idea of capturing creatures and forcing them to fight, but Cassette Beasts doesn’t have that problem. Oh yeah, good point about them being doubles. I do like the aesthetic/graphics and that it’s avaliable on every platform, unlike pokémon.

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