bin.pol.social

ErrorCode, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

Making a deal with a Daedric Prince.

OrkneyKomodo, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?
@OrkneyKomodo@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I have to run down a slope, dramatically backstabbing a load of big-headed creatures.

UwixTheWizard, do gaming w Do you prefer playing with Keyboard or controller more, and for what type of games?
@UwixTheWizard@beehaw.org avatar

Honestly, after years of gaming I would have to say controller. I grew up on consoles and didn’t start playing on the pc until my late teens. I can manage on MnK but after a while my wrists get sore even with wrists rests and I tend to forget where the keys are on the keyboard. Where as on controller I can comfortably play in any position and very seldomly my fingers may get sore but not as bad as my wrists. Plus, I like playing on a big TV depending on the game lol

Euphoma, do gaming w Do you prefer playing with Keyboard or controller more, and for what type of games?

Most rhythm games are better on keyboard except for project diva which is way better on controller. I think osu! is the least controller friendly rhythm game and osu!mania style rhythm games are probably impossible on controller if it needs more than 6 keys (unless the charts are designed for controller and don’t require hitting every button at once).

Project diva feels really bad to play on keyboard for some reason. I think its because its only recently been playable on pc and I’m used to controller. It just feels better on thumbs.

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of October 15th

Fallout 76. It’s actually pretty fun as long as you have the capacity for a massive perspective change (and use mods lol).

And yes you can play solo. It’s a bit more difficult, but you can do it. Also, FO76 puts a lot more emphasis on survival simulation than previous games (except FO4 in Survival Mode, which I haven’t played in yet).

Senseless, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

I die. Just like I do in CS2. Shouldn’t have started again, I’m just too old for this shit.

Zurgo, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

Peglin? I can throw stones pretty well, but not sure I can do much against sentient walls

Chocrates, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

I’m in the Star Trek universe! Post scarcity and a chance to understand the mysteries of the universe and live twice as long? Sign me up.

brihuang95, do gaming w Lords of the fallen. Are you finding it very difficult or not? Let's try understand why
@brihuang95@sopuli.xyz avatar

oh shit i didn’t realize it already dropped!! kinda keep an eye on it

insurgenRat,

Look I’m in love but it’s a very polarising game. If you enjoyed playing ds1 blind, and saw something to love in ds2 underneath the weirdness then I’d recommend it but it is not the fast and nippy ds3 onwards style. Levels are confusing if you don’t figure out what the map is telling you, umbral exploration is fascinating but tense and you have to rush sections which can make you miss what you picked up.

There’s a few baffling decisions like auto filling your quick bar with new consumables when empty, not marking new items in inventory, lore being state gated (it miiight be some arty you get the story from various perspectives thing but I’m unconvinced yet), and many people find the ranged pressure unpleasant. You’re often being shot at till you clear an area.

Turmbaumeister,

How are the runbacks? Are they using the tedious=difficult mentality? DS2 was terrible because of that but on the other hand the recent lies of p is a masterpiece.

insurgenRat,

I thought lies of p was an absurdly tedious game tbh with the bosses requiring lots of memorisation. I think a lot of this is subjective.

You can place temporary bonfires pretty close to bosses using a consumable you can buy or loot from certain enemies. Some people seem to be running out of them, I have more than I need and I feel like I’m using them liberally.

It’s a very similar game to ds1. It’s that sort of slower, easier game where you spend most of your time methodically exploring a large interconnected world. Once you know what you’re doing you can run through a lot.

If you thought ds1 was a bad game you probably won’t like this. If you thought it was fantastic you probably will.

Turmbaumeister,

To each their own 😀

Thanks for the detailed response! Temporary bonfires seem to be a real solution to my main concern about this game.

I liked ds1 when it was new, I’d hate it now for being grindy and the time wasting runbacks but the level design was top notch.

From your response I gather it has the good parts of DS1 with modern graphics and a solution to the bad part. I’ll probably like it then and will definitely try it

insurgenRat,

I actually love ds1 in its entirity. well until the Lord vessel then the game falls apart. I’m not one for fast paced games (arthritis) and really enjoy the exploration and navigation. Sometimes I just load up a save and run around for a bit to relax :p

I’m not sure my opinion is the one to listen to in your case, given it seems you prefer the later faster gameplay with more emphasis on bosses?

All I can really say is I haven’t enjoyed a souls game much since demons souls and dark souls (although sekiro was quite fun it’s very different) until now. I’m only about 10 hours in on my third area.

I do think many people’s complaints (but not all! there are some very idiosyncratic choices) are from not paying attention. Like recognising when you can pull out the lantern to do something, when you need to fully cross into death, making full use of all the tools (e.g. regenerating ranged ammunition, the map they give you, kicks, mid combo 1h 2h swapping, powerstancing), understanding how the level designers have set traps.

If you try play it like lies of P and just sprint in parrying everything you have a bad time and get swarmed. you also need to engage in the RPG parts more, swapping rings and armour for the current challenge and so on.

Turmbaumeister,

I don’t necessarily prefer the faster pace. It’s just that LoP happens to be the first game in the genre, that I’ve played, without major downsides, at least for me.

Everything else has either time wasting, lengthy runbacks or game breaking bosses to artificially increase the difficulty (see Malenia), or is Sekiro.

A modern DS1 like game without the tedium and with some new ideas is very much something that appeals to me. If it has RPG mechanics then all the better, I liked how LoP had perks on top of the traditional, simplistic attribute system and at least some choices.

Everything you say makes me want to play it more 😀

profoundninja, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

Elden Ring. If it’s anything like my playing experience. I’m dead within 2 minutes.

stolid_agnostic, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

Pikmin start listening to me for some reason.

Water1053, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

BroForce. I’d flex all over those fools from Terroristan

starman2112, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?
@starman2112@sh.itjust.works avatar

I’d be living in the slums in Night City and have a higher quality of life than anyone I know in real life

mycatiskai,

Until some person with too many implants goes psycho and rips you apart as you walk down the street.

starman2112,
@starman2112@sh.itjust.works avatar

I mean, how many civs actually get got by psychos in the game?

mycatiskai,

Probably not a lot, but certainly a lot can get hit by stray bullets by the response teams. If cops today are getting collateral damage and no accountability, the future privately funded police services are bound to be be far from accountable.

jellyfish, do gaming w Weekly “What are you playing” Thread || Week of October 15th

I’ve been really enjoying the new expansion for Cyberpunk 2077. I personally loved the game when it came out, specifically for the tone and environment and the main story. I did stop playing pretty quickly though because the progression didn’t click for me and different parts felt too shallow.

I really think the 2.0 update fixed a lot of game mechanics I didn’t like the first time through, and the expansion has a great tight storyline I’ve really enjoyed sinking my teeth into. I’m going back and doing all of the side quests I didn’t get to before I stopped playing too. And so excited to see what the alternate ending they cooked up is. If you had fun with the game, definitely consider picking it back up!

liminis,

Same deal, and definitely. Before 2.0 I thought Cyberpunk did some really cool stuff with narrative and inter-quest structures, but now the core of the game is a ton of fun all by itself. (The little Edgerunners references in the perk trees are a nice touch, too!)

And god do I love being free of the tedious incentives to check/compare all your attire and weapons for the best stats; standardisation here is a blessing.

kuadhual, do games w You teleport into the last game world you played. What happens next?

Unciv.

Just living my daily life until other civilization besieges and bombard my city.

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