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Persona 5 Strikers (PS4) by jp (Feb 18th, 2025 at 11:58:55) |
I've decided to bounce off this game - which is a weird thing to say. I haven't played it in a few weeks and I'm worried that I'll have forgotten everything about it. So, I'm sort of admitting to a bit of laziness. I don't feel up to remembering, learning, figuring things out in this game when, from the few hours I played, I wasn't terribly engaged or interested. It was pretty overwhelming and...fiddly. Like, I didn't understand what the point of a lot of it was. To be fair, I did not play Persona 5, and I'm guessing for people who are old hands at this series...they probably either slipped right in or bemoaned how much tutorializing there was and how annoying and so on. So, the game's creators are both damned if they do and damned if they don't...
The game also seemed very overwhelming in action - I'm supposed to assign orders to teammates, see what they're doing, plan my own attacks and combos...and I felt like button mashing just seemed more efficient (and effective). Which isn't really a good sign, no? As in, it really deflates any interest in figuring out systems and attacks and all the rest.
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Wingspan (PC) by dkirschner (Feb 16th, 2025 at 12:10:31) |
The tutorial for Wingspan felt overwhelming (over an hour of tutorial!), but once I started playing, everything quickly clicked. I really liked it, and played it until I got all the Steam cards, but there's no narrative or anything to motivate me to continue. Its focus seems to be on multiplayer, though I didn't play against people, just AI matches. There are 50-something achievements, which is what I ended up focusing on until I got the Steam cards. I would keep playing for some achievement hunting (play x points worth of birds; end the game with at least x points; etc.), but that will generally involve starting matches to aim for one specific achievement or another (e.g., I'm only going to focus on high-point birds), which feels grindy. The AI also doesn't provide much of a challenge. On easy, they seem to have no strategy whatsoever. On normal, they...also don't seem to have much of a strategy. And on hard, they...also don't seem to have much of a strategy. At least, I couldn't figure it out, and I obliterated the AI on every difficulty.
The game itself is definitely a nontraditional card game in that you aren't fighting. You're trying to fill your nature preserve with birds, and you simply want to outscore your opponents. I like the emphasis on nature, conservation, and birding. There are many ways to get points, from playing birds with point values, to laying eggs, to caching food, to pursuing randomized round-based objectives. At its heart, the game is about generating and spending resources. You have food, eggs, and birds (cards). You need food and eggs to play birds, and different birds have different effects. Some effects trigger when you play the bird, others trigger when you perform an action in its habitat, others trigger when other players perform a specific action, and so on.
There are three habitats. In the forest, you can get food. In the grasslands, you can lay eggs. And in the wetlands, you can draw cards. When you play a bird, it goes into one of the three habitats (indicated on its card), where it also boosts the action in that habitat. For example, if you lay eggs in the grasslands and have no birds there, you will get two eggs to distribute among your birds. If you have one bird there, you will get two eggs and have the option to discard a card for a third egg. If you have two birds there, you will get three eggs. And so on up to five birds. So, the more birds you have in any habitat, the greater utility that habitat's action will have.
You can immediately see that some strategies might call for focusing on a specific habitat (draw a ton of cards by stacking birds in the wetlands, for example), or balancing birds across all three. Sometimes, strategies will revolve around placing birds you already have, aiming for generating their particular food needs, while other times, you'll want to focus on amassing food and let existing food drive your choice of playing birds. Sometimes, you'll want to focus on meeting round-based objectives to score points, while other times you'll want to focus on laying a ton of eggs, or some variety of means to gain points.
There is no "deckbuilding" per se. It's a card game with a finite deck from which all players draw. So, play is very much dictated by what players tend to draw from the deck, with less ability for overarching strategy. How you play each game will depend on what you start with, what the random round-based objectives are (assuming you want to aim for them), and what other players do. There are a couple expansions that add some more mechanics and cards, but they cost $$. I'd be curious to find some people to play this with and get more into it. Or, perhaps I'll grab the board game!
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Yeah! You Want "Those Games", Right? So Here You Go! Now, Let's See You Clear Them! (PC) by jp (Feb 15th, 2025 at 18:42:49) |
This is probably one of the longest game titles I've seen, and it doesn't even have a hyphen!
I have no idea what the real story behind this game is, but I wouldn't be surprised to learn it started as an off-hand comment or joke made by someone in a bar, to a friend, after everyone has had a few too many drinks. Either that, or it was a game jam game that started as a joke.
This game is basically a collection of many levels of different puzzle games. But, the puzzle games are all games on the mini-puzzles used by some f2p mobile game developers to market their games. Typically, the games being marketed bear no relation (thematically or gameplay-wise) to the puzzle shown in the ad. Sometimes the ad is playable - othertimes you just watch it play automatically - and often frustratingly because the playback is less efficient than you would be or it makes mistakes. (pin pulling puzzles are perhaps the most notorious?)
So, is it fun? Fun enough - there's lots of levels, some are trickier than others, and the game's production values are...low. This is fine by me except when it takes too long to reload and stuff like that.
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Marvel's Spider-Man 2 (PS5) by dkirschner (Feb 14th, 2025 at 10:30:14) |
Spider-Man 2 was great, astounding. This was my first AAA game on the PS5. The audio, the graphics, the animations, all made me feel as if I was in an action movie. It weaves in and out of cut scenes and playable parts, especially during the impressive action sequences and boss battles. I would stop sometimes and just admire what I was seeing. At the same time as I can’t really say anything negative about it, aside from some minor complaints, I can’t really add more positive things either. It was simply stunning to play. Like, everything about it. It’s very similar to the first game, which I said the same things about. But, since I want to write something, here are some slightly more specific thoughts:
• Thank you for including fast travel and making it quickly and easily available. Web-swinging through New York City is fun, but getting to objectives quickly is more fun.
• Combat is ridiculously tight. There is good enemy variety, it’s challenging, and the Spider-Men’s move sets are fun. My one combat gripe is that enemies got spongy at the end when you’re fighting all the symbiotes. It made those optional nest missions especially annoying, and those are the only ones I didn’t happily complete. One other combat comment—not a gripe—is that the variety gadgets and special moves that the Spider-Men have are all useful, but for me they were functionally equivalent. You will end up with four equipped special moves and four equipped gadgets. I used whichever one was available on cooldown. It didn’t matter what it was because they all serve one function: temporarily immobilize enemies (well, two for the special moves I guess because those do deal damage!). So like, two gadgets and two special moves are available. Which do you choose?! Doesn’t matter. They all temporarily immobilize some enemies, letting you get some free punches and kicks in.
• One major improvement that Spider-Man 2 has over the first one is that stealth is better integrated. In the first game, I disliked MJ’s and Miles’s stealth sequences. But, MJ’s are really fun in this game. She gets a gun, which is part of it, but somehow they were just better sequences, more engaging. Maybe they were shorter than the first game’s too? Maybe it was the switching back and forth between three playable protagonists, who were often collaborating on a mission, that made her parts more exciting? The first game would switch to MJ, and I’d lean back in my seat: “Sigh.” This game would switch to MJ, and I’d lean forward: “Time to taze some fools!”
• I completed all the side missions early (except for the nests, which unlock later and I ignored). It was funny when Pete and Miles would say, “let’s see what needs doing around the city first,” in between main missions to encourage exploration and side missions, and there was nothing to do because I did all the side missions already. So I’d go pet my cats for five minutes and come back to a new main mission. As with the first game, side missions are so well woven into the gameplay, narrative, and exploration, that you don’t even notice you’re “just” doing optional open world content.
• Speaking of side content, there are a bunch of suits to unlock. Many of the suits have three styles, so there are literally probably a couple hundred. There are also a ton of upgrades to gadgets, health, and so on. You’ll get many of these just as a matter of course. They generally didn’t feel that important, but I am sure they served me well.
• The overarching and interweaving stories are really strong again. I remember being impressed with this in the first game, too. It’s cool that here all the villains from the first game are rehabilitated (or rehabilitating). You think that the main bad guy is Kraven and his hunters, but it turns out that’s just a set-up for the main antagonist in the game’s latter third. I suppose you could see it coming, maybe clearer if you are a big Spider-Man fan. I didn’t see it coming, but looking back, it’s awesome how those parallel storylines built up and then intersected. The only story gripe I have is that, man, these young adults are melodramatic. They are in their feelings so hard. It was a little exhausting.
• On the other hand, the representation in this game is great. If you want to see diversity in video games, Spider-Man 2 is a shining example. There is a deaf character who signs, and Miles and some others speak with her in sign language. The game references African American history in terms of museum exhibits about jazz music, it talks about BIPOC artists, your playable characters are a White man, a White woman, and a biracial Black and Hispanic man, who speaks Spanish sometimes with his mother (and signs with his friend). The New York City in the game feels culturally rich and like a celebration of the real New York City, its people, and its culture.
• One final note is that I recall thinking that the first game felt a bit bloated with all the side missions and the forced-feeling stealth sequences and the constant twists and turns of the story that kept it going and going. I did not feel that at all in this one, except perhaps with the health sponge enemies at the end, but that’s so minor taking the whole package together.
Wonder when the third one is coming out!
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Persona 5 Strikers (PS4) by jp (Feb 12th, 2025 at 23:08:48) |
You'd think I'd know better by now. But, this game has a LOT of reading to do. At least a lot of reading for me. I was expecting the game to be much more action-based, which I guess it is - but it's only action-based when you get to the action bits. And in between, at least as far as I've gotten...there's way more reading than action.
I think I've only played a lot of Persona 4 Golden Somethingorother - the music game that was a spin-off? I'm not sure, it's late right now and I'm a bit tired. But, I think I did not play Persona 5, nor any other mainline entry. Isn't that weird? It's like I'm dancing around the series and just going for the spinoffs because I don't want to commit the time to really taking a bit out of the "big" titles.
Anyways, this one is as stylish and slick in its presentation as I expected (I do read a fair amount, so I'm familiar with Persona 5 in at least the visuals!)...and obviously I don't know who the characters are or what's happened to them before and so on. There's lots of things implied and suggested that a regular series fan would know what was what. BUT, it does make sense enough for me to play and move along.
The game takes place in Tokyo - at least the "daytime/real world" parts. And it's kind of neat because I vacationed there the year before last and so there's places I recognize! As for the gameplay bits - I'm not entirely convinced it all works - so far it seems super chaotic, there's lots to keep track of, but I'm mostly button-mashing and hoping for the best. That has resulted in times where I've TPKed...and not realized I was even in danger of that. I'm still unclear on whether this is a me problem or a game problem. More likely a me problem, but I might not be interested in learning what to pay attention to and so on...
...and yes, there's also a lot of reading, and moving around in 3rd person 3D environments that's really janky and awkard and...kind of disappointing! We'll see how much longer I play. I do think it was interesting that you can bail on missions - re-up/heal/etc. and then just go back in. This isn't a cheeze - because the game itself suggest/recommends/points it out as a thing you can and perhaps should do!
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