Certainly a surprise, but I’m interested to see how it turns out. I appreciate that there’s a sort of sincerity to it - they nailed the style of those old games but it doesn’t seem too tongue-in-cheek or reliant on references/memes.
The giant rat who makes all of da rules
Certainly a surprise, but I’m interested to see how it turns out. I appreciate that there’s a sort of sincerity to it - they nailed the style of those old games but it doesn’t seem too tongue-in-cheek or reliant on references/memes.
Played it a long time ago on the original hardware, such a bonkers game. Wish the series would’ve had a full comeback.
I’ve tried to get into Oblivion a few times and never stuck with it. Skyrim was my first Elder Scrolls game and it’s hard to go back.
Also open world games are kind of daunting these days… I like the idea of spending hundreds of hours exploring a game but I don’t actually have the hours to do so.
I picked up Diablo 4, and also had to sign up for Playstation Plus since it’s always online… Ended up spending more time playing the games from the Plus catalog. The story is surprisingly good - I always though D3’s story was kind of dumb, but the atmosphere in this one is great, to the point where I’m often not listening to a podcast when I play (at least until I finish the campaign)
I played through Stray in a few days - incredibly charming game. In a way it almost reminded me of Chibi Robo, since you’re a little guy exploring a human-sized environment. Definitely recommend it.
I also did a run of Until Dawn, which I played years ago. I always intended to replay it but it’s hard to motivate myself to redo a story-heavy game like this where it’s going to be a few hours before things really start branching off in interesting ways. I really like how they play with different flavors of horror, from slasher to paranormal, to play with your expectations if you’re a genre-savvy horror fan. Going to check out The Quarry sometime.
And I’m playing Alan Wake, for another TV-show-esque horror experience. The Stephen King and Twin Peaks inspiration is pretty obvious but I like both of those things. Combat is a little frustrating, though, it’s easy to lose track of enemies if you’re fighting a group, and the cinematic slow-mo sometimes gets annoying.
Yeah, the idea of a “backlog” just sounds like a chore to me. I just try to not buy as many games anymore - I think Steam sales and similar events got people in the habit of buying dozens of games at a time, and then your library fills up with games you’ve never touched.
I don’t really buy games anymore unless I’m going to start them within the next week or so.