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Thrillville: Off the Rails (DS) by jp (Jul 15th, 2025 at 17:10:16) |
I haven't played any of the Thrillville games (I assume there's at least two because I think this one's a sequel) nor am I a huge fan of what I think are related games like "Rollercoaster Tycoon". But, I was impressed with this one - somewhat. It started when I saw that it was published by LucasArts! That was unexpected and, weirdly, whenever I see that I assume developed by them but that's obviously not the case. There must be a fair amount of years in which LucasArts was publishing all sorts of things that have no relation to anything by Lucas...or their own IP either.
Anyways, what I've thought most interesting in the game is how it really eases the often overwhelming experience of many of these simulation games - especially those on the DS where you have a touchscreen but you can't expect the same fidelity and interaction resolution as you had on the PC. It's just more clunky and slow so some stuff doesn't work as well. So, I've been playing the campaign and was able to quickly figure stuff out - and you start with a park template for which you sort of fill in blanks as told by different goals (build a this kind of ride). There's enough flexibility that I've gone off-piste and it's been fine...but I liked how it has really leaned into the story (rival amusement park is trying to sabotage you and steal your amazing ride designs) - and as I meet objectives more parks have opened up (there's a nice rotating globe to select them as a menu). The missions are short, pretty easy and I've been able to appreciate all of stuff in this game.
Strangely, at least so far, a lot of if it is playing carnival-style mini-games. I'm either playing park visitors (if you beat them, they'll do something you want/give you info) or my own employees (same as visitors, though there are some games to play to train them to be better employees). So far the management part of these kinds of games has been downplayed significantly - I generally have enough money to pay for whatever new thing I put in the park, and happiness hasn't been an issue either.
I've played enough to get to the point where you build rollercoasters - and there's a new interface "gimmick" the game uses here (and elsewhere, but it makes the most sense thematically here).
So, you pick the coaster and it shows you (on bottom screen) a generic layout/outline. You trace it with the stylus and go to the next step. Here the generic layout has a few sections highlighted and you can design those specific sections (e.g. make a loop). You're essentially picking from available options - but you have to draw them with the stylus (draw one of the possible shapes). Then the highlighted section is replaced with a track section embodying the change (e.g. shows a loop). It's pretty neat and I preferred it over the typical "pick the thing you want" that then turns into a drag/drop nightmare of trying to slot/fit/orientate the section into the track you're making (things don't line up, etc.). Very elegant and works really well for the DS and it's screens!
THe same idea (draw a shape from a few pre-approved ones) is also used in the game-y conversation interface. Here you need to convince an NPC about something - and must choose from a few response options. Instead of just tapping the option you want, you have to draw the shape that corresponds to that option. Thematically it makes no sense - but I guess it's part of this games interaction vocabulary for some reason. I wonder if it will appear in other parts of the game as well?
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Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder's Revenge (PC) by dkirschner (Jul 13th, 2025 at 17:13:35) |
Short and sweet beat-em-up that is very reminiscent of old TMNT games. I used to love going to the arcade to play Turtles in Time. They nailed the retro feel of those old ones and added lots of fun animations. There are more modern elements here like a bigger move set and subtle leveling up, but at the end of the day it's pretty button mash-y.
I liked the music, but the audio quality of the voices wasn't great. I often couldn't hear/tell what the character was saying; voices would be lo-fi and drowned out by music. One time the audio went all choppy cutting in and out. I understand that they got some good voice talent, so I'm not sure why the audio quality wasn't better.
One thing I did that I usually don't do was play online co-op. Me and some other person (and a couple third people) played through about 5 levels. Someone had already beaten the game because they'd unlocked paths between levels and we took a shortcut from level 5 or 6 to level 11. So technically I skipped a handful! It was fun playing with a few random strangers, all beating up foot soldiers and bosses. You can cheer on teammates, which gives them some health, and you can revive fallen teammates too.
There are a handful of characters who vary in power, range, and speed. I chose April O'Neil because she smacks people with a microphone, which was funny. There's replay value here for big fans to explore all the characters, but this is definitely a one and done for me. Fun little nostalgia trip.
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SNKRX (PC) by jp (Jul 13th, 2025 at 11:28:27) |
A student recommended this game - it's a rogue-like snake shooter game. Which, on the face of it just sounds super interesting. And it is/was! ("was" because I finished playing it and I'm not sure I want to spend more time getting all the achievements or that sort of thing...
It's 25 levels or so, each consisting of waves of monsters you must avoid and each snake segment is a "character" with some abilities. There's a cool stacking mechanic - each character can have one or more classes and if you have multiple of the same class you get a bonus buff so it's worth specializing - but at the end f each level you can buy from the shop (from three options). When you beat the game you can unlock a higher difficulty AND a +1 on the maximum length of your snake. There's some more stuff going on, of course (different enemy types, different effects from the different characters) but there's a few design decisions I thought were neat/clever/smart...
a. Increasing the maximum snake length seems like a perfect balance with the increased length of the snake BUT it also feels like a real incentive to play at the higher difficulty because a longer snake means more chances of getting the buffs from different snake types which is an exciting thing to look forward to for each run.
b. You get money at the end of each level which you use to buy new characters (these can also get upgraded when you buy multiple of the same). The shop has a "reroll" - it was a smart decision to make the reroll cost money BUT it's pretty cheap - especially when you get to the higher levels (and earn more cash). It really helps you lean in to the intent to try to get a set of same character class to get the buffs. Also, curiously, the shop levels up too (automatically, but you can spend money to upgrade early if you want) - this changes the odds on the rarity of characters that will show up!
I've beat the game, but I'll leave the GameLog open in case I think of something else I want to write about.
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Tom Clancy's Endwar (DS) by jp (Jul 12th, 2025 at 13:44:05) |
So, ten years later and I started to play this again having forgotten completely that I had played it before.
Strangely(?) I'm not experiencing issues with the interface, and while I would not say I'm having a wild and great time, I'm perhaps a lot more permissive of some of this game's quirks? In fact, I'm finding some of them positively interesting from a game design perspective.
In most games of this type you move and attack - typically in the same turn. Here, you move and you attack in a later turn - and when it's your turn to attack you need to see how your opponent will move, and so on. So, there's a different cadence to each turn which makes things a bit trickier to figure out an resolve. I find it's a lot easier to make a mistake by, say, getting a unit into trouble and also a lot harder to predict the outcome of a battle. Units are also a lot hardier - they'll stick around for longer.
Another interesting departure from Advance Wars is that positioning matters and can give you an advantage. If you're attacking and have multiple units adjacent to the enemy, that's a bonus. But. the bonus is better if your units are on opposite side of the enemy. So, surrounding and then attacking is always a good idea if you can manage it.
Finally, and I'm not sure how much of an effect this has - units gain experience and get better! Every time you're in a fight and survive you get a star. Destroy an enemy unit, two stars. When you have six starts you level up and are boosted in combat. I'm not sure by how much since I haven't been able to do this too often. But, so far it's pretty interesting.
It's still a bit tricky for me because there are lots of different units and I haven't really learned their ranges, attack ranges and so on. It's definitely more complex than Advance Wars.
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Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 (PC) by dkirschner (Jul 7th, 2025 at 07:46:43) |
Not going to write much for this. It's as amazing as everyone says. Best JRPG I've played in many, many, many years. Like, jaw-droppingly good. Beautiful art, incredible original sound track, excellent writing, interesting characters, compelling world and story with twists and turns, engaging combat with parry and dodge mechanics, lots of discoverable side quests, dozens of challenging optional fights with "chromatic" enemies, mimes, and world bosses, etc., etc. The main things that need attention are improving the map (indicators for what you've explored, level info for areas, some ability to add markers or something, would all be nice) and improving the pictos organization options and equip screens.
But like, it is so good that I'm going through my wishlist and just deleting most other JRPGs. It's a must-play.
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Pokemon Yellow (GBC) by Prodimator |
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most recent entry: Thursday 11 October, 2012
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These past few days I have returned to a great childhood pastime: Pokemon. I never played any of the games before when I was younger since for some reason it never really interested me. I’ll be honest, all of my friends were getting Black and White 2 and I felt extremely left out. So I pulled out my classic top view strategy game, Pokemon Yellow. I’m a bit confused as to why I didn’t fall in love with these games before. A lot of it probably had to do with the fact that this was a top view game, where you look down at the player from up above (see Zelda). This style of gameplay has always felt awkward to me so I steered away from it. However, as I throw down hours upon hours of Pokemon, this top view style is really starting to grow on me.
Game Freak, the developers of Pokemon Yellow, also implemented a leveling/difficulty system that made the game flow very smoothly. You start off battling low level Pokemon, often bug types, considering they are generally the weakest Pokemon (come on, Caterpie is a joke). As your Pokemon level up and as you progress through the story, the difficulty of the Pokemon that you encounter also increases. It is a system that works. It is safe to say that no one would ever want to battle a level 100 Zapdos with a level 1 Pikachu.
As far as the battle system goes, it is pretty straight forward. It is a turn based battle with the player choosing an attack which is then followed by the CPU attacking and then the player or vice versa. I’ve never really been a fan of this style either, but again, like the top view camera, I’m slowly being brought over to the other side.
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