bin.pol.social

StarChip, do games w Recommendations for Pacific Northwest Themed Games?
@StarChip@kbin.social avatar

Great post, thank you! I was born in the PNW and I love those vibes.

Sunny,
@Sunny@slrpnk.net avatar

I’m only a little bit jelous :P

Kaldo, do gaming w Am I the only person that feels that retro games are better?
@Kaldo@kbin.social avatar

Abandon AAA, buy more indie or AA games and you'll find what you want

sleepybisexual,

Actually haven’t bought any new games that recently, can you give any recommendations?

AdamBomb,

Try looking for a Steam curator with tastes similar to yours. I like SkillUp’s curator page, maybe try that as a jumping off point.

sleepybisexual,

Could try that I guess, but I don’t really do PC gamjng anymore.

AdamBomb,

Well, same principle can be applied to other platforms. Find a streamer who plays a game you like you like and see what else they like.

Blisterexe,

You should try hollow knight, its a great metroidvania, and without saying too much the entire game is amazing, just the first zone is a bit boring

sleepybisexual,

Yea :3 I’ll get the switch ROM.

BTW, not exactly a metroidvania but skul: the hero slayer is a nice platofrmer too

Blisterexe,

Why the switch ROM?

sleepybisexual,

Not doing PC gaming anymore, and also I have a device that can emulate some switch

JackGreenEarth,
@JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee avatar

Which device is that?

sleepybisexual,

Rp4 pro

Blisterexe,

Out of curiosity, what device is that?

sleepybisexual,

Retroid pocket 4 pro

Kaldo,
@Kaldo@kbin.social avatar

I can give so many but you'll have to narrow down your preferences a bit ^^

I've recently been playing Remnant 2, Songs of Syx, Age of Darkness, dotAGE, Helldivers, Valheim, Against the Storm... all really impressive and amazing games made by (relatively) small studios or AA developers with a passion for games. If you're completely new to the indie scene you probably can't go wrong with Hades, Hollow Knight, Stardew Valley, Terraria

sleepybisexual,

Ooh :3

I’ve played Terraria :3

averyminya,

Hero’s Hour is a pixel art game that’s about building an army. Really solid indie game! Also a fan of Revita, it’s a roguelike but done very well and is mostly unique.

rbits,

Balatro, game of the year for me so far

ILikeBoobies, do games w The PlayStation 2

What’s not to love about this legendary system?

It was incredibly underpowered and dev kits were made more powerful to entice devs. Leading to a lot of poorly optimized games

timo_timboo_,

It wasn’t as underpowered as many people think. I know it’s easy to go like “yeah the cpus clockspeed is like 50% lower than the gamecubes and half as slow as the one in the xbox”, but really that’s just half of the story. The Emotion Engine was quite powerful in the right hands, you just needed to know how to fully use it, including the 2 vector units. There are enough games out there that show the PS2s full potential. The problem is that a lot of the earlier games didn’t really fully utilize the EE.

ILikeBoobies,

So you just ignored the 2nd half of the problem

timo_timboo_,

That dev kits were more powerful? I looked it up and wasn’t able to find anything about that. Besides that, things like having more RAM is not uncommon on devkits if you mean that.

ILikeBoobies,

things like having more RAM is not uncommon on devkits if you mean that.

But you usually let devs know

timo_timboo_,

Were you a dev back in the day that’s still mad at sony for not telling you by any chance? Just curious, because you seem like you have quite the problem with Sony not telling devs about the differences of a devkit.

ILikeBoobies,

I wouldn’t say mad, I was just saying something not to love about it

Sneptaur, do gaming w Am I the only person that feels that retro games are better?
@Sneptaur@pawb.social avatar

It’s not a controversial take, but survivorship bias is certainly strong with anything like this. People like classic rock because the bad songs from that era have faded into obscurity. The same goes for your favorite retro games; for every Ocarina of Time there was a Superman 64. For every Zelda there were 3 shitty LJN games.

The type of trash is just different. Instead of low-effort cash grab games, now we get high-effort overworked devs making a game that asks you to pay for it over and over again.

TheMonkeyLord,
@TheMonkeyLord@sopuli.xyz avatar

You even see this with games that were insanely cash grabby from ten or so years ago. Borderlands 2 made you pay for every level cap increase and tiny piece of updated content as it rolled out. The handsome collection fixed that, but it’s still true that it really tried to toll you at every corner. Game is still highly regarded though.

millie,

I dunno. I pulled Septera Core out of a bargain bin shoved together with some forgettable mech game for $10, and it was pretty great.

I don’t think effort is what makes the difference. Games now are designed increasingly in ways that are less ‘risky’ in terms of corporate measures of user satisfaction than they used to be. It’s the kind of measure of satisfaction that sees a quest marker constantly showing your destination as clearly preferable to having to actually look at the world and find your way around.

I’ve run into this with friends of mine who are into modding before. When they see one mechanic that negates another mechanic, or that degrades the output quality of another mechanic, they see it as wasted code. To me, that’s the essence of the tension and release in a game. You create a state the player wants to get to, then you put shit in their way and provide them with various ways of solving your obstacles. That’s basically narrative driven gaming in a nutshell, an interaction between barriers and ways of negating those barriers.

But like, I think that may be part of what’s missing sometimes in pushing these more like real-world convenience-oriented features akin to a GPS app. If you’re making a GPS app, you want it to work perfectly, but in a game it’s kind of more fun if it’s got a little bit of jank in it. Not the actual code, obviously, but the player’s interaction with the mechanic in the game world. A straightforward trip from point A to point B isn’t much of a story.

Honestly, I think it’s just more of the kind of watering down that’s inevitable as you get too much money wrapped up in a project. Corporate infrastructures and IPOs aren’t conducive to art. Or quality in anything else, for that matter. It doesn’t just affect what decisions are made in a game’s development, either. It affects how people are educated, who gets hired, how labor is divided.

There’s definitely something to be said for the effects of nostalgia and survivorship bias on the appearance of retro gaming in a modern context, but there also have been major changes that aren’t just about the decisions of individual companies.

Sneptaur,
@Sneptaur@pawb.social avatar

Honestly, my argument that new and old games are both good would be to point straight at the Ratchet & Clank series.

In my opinion, it’s only gotten better with time, and the latest entry in the Series from 2021 is genuinely one of the greatest games I’ve ever played. It’s modern, cutting-edge, requiring a PCIe Gen4 SSD and a DualSense controller for the best experience. It’s just fantastic. New games, even AAA games, can be great so long as the project is being led by people who know how to make good games.

Paradachshund, do games w Recommendations for Pacific Northwest Themed Games?

I don’t have any specific recommendations but I’m from the Pacific Northwest and it’s really interesting to me to see a post like this. Are you from there too?

Sunny,
@Sunny@slrpnk.net avatar

Nope not at all haha, from Scandinavia myself. Just very much love the whole Pacific Northwest vibes seen in series like Twin Peaks and such. Really want to make a trip over just to have seen it once.

Paradachshund,

There’s a ton of Scandinavian influence in western Washington state where I’m from. I think you’d feel pretty at home. 🙂

Sunny,
@Sunny@slrpnk.net avatar

<3

Hildegarde, do games w Recommendations for Pacific Northwest Themed Games?

Oxenfree is an adventure game that takes place on an island off the coast of northern Oregon. Good little game that tells its story in about 5 hours.

Starkstruck, do games w Half Life 3

If Valve does ever make HL3, it’s going to have to be ground breaking. Every Half Life game redefines what gaming is capable of. Eg HL: Alyx was an insane demonstration of what VR can do. I do think it’ll happen eventually, and may even partially be in development right now. But I don’t think we’ll hear anything about it for a very long time.

Coskii, do gaming w Dpad vs analog stick
@Coskii@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

D-pad for precision, analog for thereabouts.

Or in monster hunter, d-pad for camera with index finger, analog for movement with thumb, embrace claw until everything cramps.

djsoren19, do gaming w Am I the only person that feels that retro games are better?

There certainly was a “golden age of gaming,” where the cost for a studio to exist and make a game was pretty low and they were more willing to experiment. The thing people forget is that there was so, so, so much trash and shovelware made during that era as well. We remember the incredible game that innovated and drove the medium forward, and we forget the movie tie-ins and genre knockoffs.

These days, AAA has forgotten how to innovate, and nearly all of it is being driven by indie titles. This is because, once again, the cost to develop is now so low that literally anyone can do it. The amount of trash and shovelware we’re getting is almost ludicrous though, so it’s a lot harder to find the great titles that are overlooked, but extremely high quality has a remarkable way of cutting through the noise.

Aku, do games w Recommendations for Pacific Northwest Themed Games?

Much of The Last of Us 2 takes place in Seattle.

Sunny,
@Sunny@slrpnk.net avatar

Love me some Last of us! Literary listening to the OST right now :P

toxicbubble, do games w Recommendations for Pacific Northwest Themed Games?

Oregon trail 😂

Denjin,

That’s a journey to the PNW, not in the PNW

GrayBackgroundMusic, do gaming w Am I the only person that feels that retro games are better?

Are you cherry picking the good games out of older libraries? I find people do that a lot when remembering. It’s a survivorship bias thing. The good ones get remembered more and the bad one forgotten, so they seem like the population is better.

Telorand, do gaming w Am I the only person that feels that retro games are better?

Nah. I mean, I like old games quite a lot, but for all the gems, there’s a litany of duds. I do agree that anti-cheat and online multiplayer have hurt innovation, but the indie scene is where it’s at, if you want innovation or a focus on storytelling. Still, some of my best memories are with modern online games like Shadowbane, WoW, Warframe, Deep Rock Galactic, etc., and yet no game has yet replaced my experiences with the older Myst series.

Size of games is certainly problematic if you have a slower internet connection, but even SSDs are quite economical at this point.

If retro games are your jam, then awesome! But I think they’re just a single facet of the broader hobby of gaming.

helenslunch, do gaming w Am I the only person that feels that retro games are better?
@helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

I mean there are certainly benefits…

I would argue modern games are much more fun when their publishers aren’t trying to explore new ways to fuck you (which seems to be always).

Bougie_Birdie, do gaming w Am I the only person that feels that retro games are better?
@Bougie_Birdie@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I think nostalgia plays a pretty big factor in retro games. Like, yes, I agree that enshittification marches onwards and the state of the industry today is pretty lame.

Every time I’ve gone back to a retro game I find myself vaguely disappointed. Quality of life has come a long way, and development is iterative so it makes sense that games made twenty years ago are lacking some features that make life easier for the player. Things like fast travel in metroidvanias, or inventory and quest management, or just trying to remember what it was I was supposed to do next in an RPG are often quite lacking. Or at the least, they’re not up to today’s standards.

Survivorship bias plays a pretty big role here too. We remember the good games that stand out from the rest of them, and we forget about the crap. There was shovelware back then too, maybe not to the degree of the modern app stores with F2P games loaded with microtransactions and dark patterns, but they were there too.

Anyway, long story long, the trick in whatever generation you play seems to be to find games that respect your time as a player. I’d also recommend checking out indie games, they’re made with love, and you can find all kinds of retro-styled where you can tell the devs were passionate about games of the era.

Here’s a short list of games I’ve enjoyed that give me that retro SNES feeling:

  • Bzzzzzt - Just delightful
  • Gravity Circuit - Megaman, but the platforming actually feels good and fast
  • Nuclear Blaze - This one has a unique offering where have to put out fires while platforming
  • Skull Girls - okay, this one’s a bit older too, but in another comment you said you like Street Fighter so this might be up your alley
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