A Star is Born:
Let’s Play Champions Online Pt. 6

By Shamus Posted Tuesday Oct 27, 2009

Filed under: Shamus Plays 50 comments

If you remember from last time, I’m here to rescue survivors from this crash.
If you remember from last time, I’m here to rescue survivors from this crash.

My job is to free people from debris. If you can survive a plane crash, end up trapped by massive bits of former airplane, and sit in the snow for hours on end while being menaced by ice demons, then you are obviously a superhero. I shouldn’t be rescuing them, I should be helping them design costumes for themselves. (My advice: You can’t go wrong with some sort of star-based iconography.)

What’s interesting about this quest is that the goal isn’t what the quest log says it is. The quest log says to free people from the airplane debris. But if I lift up a chunk of plane and the person trapped underneath runs off, I don’t actually get credit for freeing them until I destroy the debris I’m holding. So the real goal of the quest is to destroy debris. You can, in fact, hurl objects at a bit of passenger-trapping debris until it’s destroyed and then dash off, leaving the passenger alone and injured in the frozen wastes and surrounded by ice demons. Doesn’t matter. As long as they aren’t pinned, my job is done.

Ah! There is my goal! A piece of debris to destroy. I only get credit for ones on top of survivors, though.
Ah! There is my goal! A piece of debris to destroy. I only get credit for ones on top of survivors, though.

As I fly around, bashing debris and pummeling ice demons, I occasionally pass civilians who are injured and helpless in the snow. Guys like this one:

staronchest_gurney.jpg

He makes eye contact. Oh geeze.

Look, I’m sorry buddy. I just can’t help you. Well, I mean… I could. There’s a gurney right over there. You’d be way better off if you were on that thing. And some medical gear. You’d have a much better chance if I could hand you that. And a box of supplies. Man, there could even be a blanket in there. Heck, it would be effortless for me to shuttle you back to base. I could do that with one hand, actually. But Cryptic entertainment didn’t put any buttons on the interface for doing any of those things. If you’re not trapped under debris or attacked by ice demons, I can’t help you.

What do I suggest? I don’t know. Maybe yell a bit. The demons are bound to notice you sooner or later.

Would it be okay if I covered you with snow? No offense, but watching you die is really making me feel like less of a superhero.

If it helps at all, I guess you should know that THIS IS NO ORDINARY STORM!

Really Cryptic… Are you familiar with the concept behind superheroes? Why would you plonk down people and deny us the ability to help them, when their need is so dire and so easily fulfilled? You wouldn’t even need superpowers to save this guy’s life. You’d need hands.

I fulfill my debris-smashing quota, as well as my demon-suckerpunching quota. Now back to base.

The fact that you’re rooted in place and have an icon over your head tells me you’re the local NPC vending machine. I mean shopkeeper. Or whatever. Look, I’m having just as much trouble mapping MMO conventions to comic book archetypes as you are.
The fact that you’re rooted in place and have an icon over your head tells me you’re the local NPC vending machine. I mean shopkeeper. Or whatever. Look, I’m having just as much trouble mapping MMO conventions to comic book archetypes as you are.

Back at base, I meet someone who wants me to craft…

Ah, the crafting system. Objects in the game fall into one of three categories: Armaments, Science Stuff, and Mystical doodads. The three crafting branches. Each branch can bestow bonuses to various stats, although you’ll probably need to consult the wiki if you want to have any idea which branch is right for your character build.

As you travel the world you’ll need to collect caches of crafting materials. (After defeating the low-XP mooks guarding them.) You’ll also need to save all the items related to your field of crafting, and disassemble them for components and skill-ups at a crafting table. (Although you’ll need to make trips to the bank to store the stuff when you hit a skill cap. Sometimes you’ll need to hoard objects and binge on crafting once you’ve leveled up enough to begin raising your crafting skill again.) You’ll need to drop some money on blueprints and conversion recipes so you can turn lesser components into greater ones.

If you manage to do all this extra fighting, sacrifice the money you’d make selling objects outright, pay for blueprints, give over half your inventory to crafting materials, make numerous trips to the crafting tables and the bank, and if you manage to pick the right branch of specialization, then you will, in rare cases, be able to craft items that are ever so slightly better than the common drops and quest rewards you’d be stuck with if you weren’t crafting. I leveled a character to 30, and in all her career she used exactly one crafted item, sometime in her early / mid 20’s. It gave her about 5 extra points of dexterity compared to the alternatives. This seemed like a pretty good deal until I checked the character info sheet and saw those 5 points made her less than 2% more likely to score a critical and give her less than 1% chance bonus to dodge.

So… was it worth those hours spent fussing with the crafting system in order to be ~1% more effective in combat for a couple of levels?

No. No it was not.

To be fair, the crafting system also gives you access to bags to expand your storage space. On the other hand, you wouldn’t need nearly as much space if you weren’t crafting. You can also craft healing items, although unless you’re really pushing against foes way above your level or something has gone wrong with your character build, you shouldn’t need those.

As with Hellgate: London, the entire crafting system is a lot of busywork for no meaningful benefit.

…a cold shield to protect me from the extreme cold I’ll be facing ahead during a particular boss fight.

Fine. Done.

I also have to save a few more people from a different plane crash on the other side of the base. These people have been frozen in blocks of ice, and I must use some doohickey to thaw them out, after which they jog away. Occasionally in the direction of safety.

Han? Is that you?
Han? Is that you?

Again, I can’t help but admire the tremendous badassery of the average civilian. David Blaine attempted a trick where he was frozen in a block of ice and it kicked his ass. And note that he was doing the easy version of the trick where you don’t have to survive a plane crash first.

Now that we’re done saving civilians, it’s time we got down to putting a stop to the Snowpocalypse. This means pummeling some more ice demons…

Here I am, fighting the forces of evil. The name over his head indicates that this is an “Ice Demon” and that he’s affiliated with the “Ice Demon” faction.  In a minute he will leave the Ice Demon faction and join the proud fraternity of “stuff which used to have a face until it came into contact with my fist”.
Here I am, fighting the forces of evil. The name over his head indicates that this is an “Ice Demon” and that he’s affiliated with the “Ice Demon” faction. In a minute he will leave the Ice Demon faction and join the proud fraternity of “stuff which used to have a face until it came into contact with my fist”.

….so that we can gather the little voodoo knicknacks they carry and summon their boss…

Here is a little move I like to call, “Pow! And then I take all your stuff.”
Here is a little move I like to call, “Pow! And then I take all your stuff.”

…and give him a beat down so I can take his inter-dimensional scroll, and take that back to…

For the last time, I ALREADY KNOW that THIS IS NO ORDINARY STORM.
For the last time, I ALREADY KNOW that THIS IS NO ORDINARY STORM.

…Ravenspeaker. Great. I would feel better if the person leading us against the axis of snow owned pants, but he seems to know what he’s talking about. Apparently the scroll I acquired will let someone enter the portal and face the demon-god kigga-something-or-other. Ravenspeaker is using his hoodoo powers to hold the storm at bay, so he can’t go through. So the job falls to me.

I jump through the portal. I have to activate that item I crafted to keep from freezing my tuckus off.

It seems I have entered a world of weird…

Floating asteroid-esque things. That’s… odd.
Floating asteroid-esque things. That’s… odd.

Unusual.
Unusual.

Looks like we’re not in Canada anymore, Dorothy.
Looks like we’re not in Canada anymore, Dorothy.

I have to fight some zombies. I’ve been occasionally encountering zombies since I arrived in Canada.

Note to game designers: Zombies are mindless undead.  I’m pretty sure you’re thinking of cannibals.
Note to game designers: Zombies are mindless undead. I’m pretty sure you’re thinking of cannibals.

These are no doubt most talkative undead in history. Their banter is infantile and un-funny, but I guess it’s hard to come up with witty material when your brains have rotted out.

Which I guess is a big problem at Cryptic Entertainment.

Zing!

On the upside, not one of them tells me how bad or out-of-the-ordinary the weather is.

Anyway, there’s a dude in a suit trying to awaken the demon-god Kigawhatsit and make it TOTALLY SNOW, LIKE SUPER-MUCH all over our base in the frozen wastes of Canada.

Just to be clear: By “cataclysm” you mean “inclement weather”, right?
Just to be clear: By “cataclysm” you mean “inclement weather”, right?

This guy has pants! How come our leader doesn’t have pants?

He’s doing some sort of ceremony to awaken Kigawhozit, who looks like a fifty foot astral projection.

I figure if I hit Mr. Pants enough he’ll probably stop. I do. He does. Yay good guys!

Your dark suit would be more menacing if you weren’t using pink energy blades.  And if your face didn’t have a crater in the shape of MY FIST!
Your dark suit would be more menacing if you weren’t using pink energy blades. And if your face didn’t have a crater in the shape of MY FIST!

This is the first real boss fight in the game. Tutorial boss Black Talon is a pushover, but this guy can give you a beating if you’re a little low in level or your character build is flawed. He’s actually using the powers I chose for SoC back in part 1, back before I did the retcon and turned him into a brawler.

I’m glad I made that change. You can re-color them so that they’re no longer pink (which doesn’t explain why this guy hasn’t done so) but after seeing these powers in action, I’m thinking they’re a little too slick and a little too flashy for ol’ Star on Chest.

Boss defeated, I return to the land of Canada. Looks like the storm has ended…

staronchest_after_storm.jpg

THIS IS NO ORDINARY PARTLY CLOUDY DAY!

Next time: Canada, the undiscovered country!

 


 

Heroes of Champions Online IV

By Shamus Posted Monday Oct 26, 2009

Filed under: Pictures 21 comments

co_agatha.jpg

Yay Girl Genius! Bonus points for the Myth Inc nod in her Supergroup affiliation. If her title could somehow refer to some Sci-Fi she’d be a nerd trifecta!

This person stuck pretty close to the character concept, using only gadget-based powers. That’s pretty admirable in this game, considering how wildly out of balance the powers are.

co_mayor.jpg

You can’t be the mayor. You have no pants.

co_incognito.jpg

I like how this guy looks like a Dr. Kleiner + Herb Tarlec robot. The name makes for a pretty good joke. “Yeah. We’ll put a jacket and glasses on him. Nobody will notice he’s a robot.”

co_ravenspeaker.jpg

Man, the stupid and ugly character concepts some people come up with…

Oh wait. He’s one of the central characters of the setting.

Nevermind then.

 


 

Experienced Points: Ding! Now You Suck Less

By Shamus Posted Sunday Oct 25, 2009

Filed under: Column 45 comments

Here is a bit about leveling and about how too many games screw it up.

I usually cite examples in my articles. When I’m talking about a bad trend, I’ll bring up a game following this trend. Inevitably this derails the conversation when some idiot fanboy experiences a short-circuit in his reasoning center:

Me: Too many games begin with the “amnesiac” premise. STALKER was a recent example.

Fanboy: But! I LOVED STALKER! So therefore amnesiac plots are always awesome and you are wrong and biased!

And then the discussion thread becomes a referendum on the game I cited instead of about the actual subject of the article. Also, people will dogpile on me for NOT referencing certain games:

Fanboy: How can you bring up amnesiac plots and leave out Muradin Bronzebeard from the WoW expansion?

Me: You know, there are games in the world I have not played…

Fanboy: Unprofessional!

I tried to sidestep this trend this time around by not citing any games. (Although Oblivion slipped in there.) This didn’t really help as much as I’d hoped. And one poster predictably jumped in and called me “unprofessional” for not citing specific games.

Hm.

 


 

Schadenfreudii

By Shamus Posted Saturday Oct 24, 2009

Filed under: Movies 38 comments

Directions:

1) Jump to the 5:05 mark.
2) Press play.
3) Watch for ten seconds.
4) Go to step 1.


Link (YouTube)

Via.

 


 

Stolen Pixels #136: After Curfew, Episode 4

By Shamus Posted Friday Oct 23, 2009

Filed under: Column 21 comments

The latest Stolen Pixels has Breen talking about Borderlands, the first game I’ve pre-ordered since (I think) 2004. It looks like the game is a mixture of Fallout 3, Hellgate: London, and the not-yet-out Rage. The first two of those were games were fun but had more promise than payoff. Hopefully Borderlands delivers the post-apocalyptic fun I’ve been waiting for. If not, well… it’s not the end of the world.

(Ba-dum-tish.)

It really is hard to keep the visuals interesting in these monologues. I noticed today that the lighting is WAY warmer than previous ones, which is a break in consistency. Oops. Hopefully, nobody will notice. I mean, besides the people I just told.

 


 

Noctis Lex: Random Chapter

By Shamus Posted Thursday Oct 22, 2009

Filed under: Nerd Culture 67 comments

The title of this post is a lie. This isn’t nearly long enough to be a chapter. This is just me playing around with the idea I talked about here. I’ll note that NaNoWriMo is coming up. I certainly don’t have time to write a proper novel, but I might take the opportunity to play around with this story some more. It seems like there’s room for some of these types of stories out there. Okay, slightly “realistic” superhero stuff has been done (and done well) but it hasn’t quite been done to death the way (say) medieval fantasy has.

Anyway, here it is, for what it’s worth…

Violet peers out over the edge of the roof and stamps her feet a few times to try and coax her body into making a little more heat. She doesn’t have any trouble keeping warm when they’re on the move, but stopping like this just slows down the blood flow. She’s pulled her glossy white and gold cape around her in a very non-heroic pose.

“So you’re still going out with her?” Fastball is talking to Brick. Some of the other heroes know each other outside of crimefighting and they shoot the breeze about personal stuff during downtime like this.

Brick is standing on the very edge of the roof, arms folded. He’s almost a silhouette against the city lights below. He nods his head, “I told her my secret identity last night.”

“Which one?”, Fastball asks idly.

“The architect one.”

“Why architect?”, Fastball asks, looking up. He’s crouched on the ledge next to Brick, back bent and looking vaguely like a very thin, angular ape in this light.

Brick shrugs, “She seems to be soft for artistic types.”

“Why didn’t you just do the painter thing again?”

“Think about where she lives,” Brick says chidingly, “She likes money too much to go for the whole ‘starving painter’ thing.”

“Hm.”

Violet can remember being awestruck when she joined the group and met Brick for the first time. He was square-jaw, broad-shoulders, dimple-cheeks gorgeous. At twenty-nine, he’s the oldest member of the Steel Defenders, and he’s the unofficial leader of the team. Her enthusiasm was doused when she finally got a sense of who he really is. He’s not a bad guy or anything, and he’s saved more lives than most of the other members of the team combined. He’s just a selfish asshole sometimes. He has wit and charm that he can turn on at will, which he uses to mask his default personality.

“Cold roof is cold.”, Ophelia says curtly, “Let’s DO something.”

Ophelia didn’t show up for the last couple of weeks. The high-school aged heroes are always a little unreliable like that. This week she appeared with a new costume. The new one has kind of an emo vampire thing going on. She’s got a lot of white makeup and dark eyeliner, with lots of flowy bits of dark cloth hanging from her like a tattered cape. They had to talk her out of changing her name to “Eclipse”.

“Yeah”, Violet agrees, “This guy isn’t going to show. We should head back towards the metro and sweep the lots again.”

“Give it a few more minutes.”, Brick says, “He’ll show.”

It’s just the four of them tonight. The others are still away due to the holidays. Or the cold.

There’s a long pause. Eventually Fastball speaks up, “I thought you said she was a stripper or something?”

Brick shakes his head, “Ex-stripper. Now she’s a… I dunno. A clerk or some crap now. Like, at a law firm or something? I think she told me but I wasn’t paying attention.” Brick spits off the edge of the roof, and there’s a pause while he waits to see where it will land. “Anyway, when I told her my secret identity she cried.

Fastball laughs. He’s got a loud, high-pitched voice. Not effeminate, but harsh and abrasive. His laugh always has a taunting quality to it. “You gonna keep seeing her?”

“Noooo.”, Brick replies as if this is the most ludicrous suggestion he’s ever heard, “She talks way too much. I figure I’ll see her a couple more times, make the most of it.”

“What about the one we saved from that fire?”

“I didn’t call her. Maybe I will later. I dunno. She had kind of a big butt.”

Ophelia groans, “When this guy shows up I’m going to crucify him for making us wait around in the cold like this.” She levitates a bit and makes all the strips of cloth flare outward as if she were facing into a harsh wind. She’s been sort of practicing this move all evening.

A flash of white light radiates from the street behind them, followed by a thunderclap. Brick bounds to the opposite edge of the roof and looks down, “There. What did I tell you? He’s a natural.”

There’s a guy on the street below, flinging lightning bolts with his fingertips. There’s no sign of any technology on him. Brick was right. He’s another natural.

“Let’s kick his ass!”, Ophelia says, but she doesn’t actually move. She’s a natural as well, but she’s also as fragile as a commoner and so she makes sure to stay behind everyone else.

Brick is standing still, watching carefully. Lightning-guy is standing in the middle of an intersection throwing bolts around. He’s gesturing wildly and setting random things on fire. People are abandoning their cars and running. His screams are maniacal.

There’s a pop and one of the traffic lights explode. This startles the guy and makes him flinch. Then he gets embarrassed and intensifies his attack.

“He just broke through”, Brick says, nodding. “He can’t control it.”

Sure enough, the guy is pointing, but the bolts of energy don’t seem to be striking where he points. They’re just sort of radiating from his hands, sometimes shooting sideways or straight up. His screams are a mixture of rage and frustration.

“Probably a crackhead or something”, Fastball offers.

Brick doesn’t answer. He waits for another minute or so. Eventually the guy is more or less out of things that can be easily set on fire. The intersection is deserted. His bolts of energy seem to be getting weaker and shorter. Eventually he stops blasting and starts hammering on the hood of a smoldering car with his fists.

“That’s our cue”, Brick says, and steps off the roof. There is a pause as he free-falls six stories before he hits the pavement like a wrecking ball. Lightning guy spins around to see six and a half feet of muscle heading his way.

The rest of them dive off after him.

 


 

You Put in Other Details

By Shamus Posted Wednesday Oct 21, 2009

Filed under: Pictures 25 comments

In 1957 a young boy – in an earnest attempt to help his nation enter the space race – designed a rocket ship. He drew his design in ballpoint on index cards, and sent it off to some “top scientists”. Here is his letter:

rocket.jpg

You can read a bit more about Denis Cox and the letter here.

The best part of it is the box with “You put in other details”. I would point out that engineers get these sort of requests all the time. Oh, they’re more professionally written and not so crudely drawn, but just about every engineer has had a run-in with a boss or client who mistook a desire for an idea and then asked the engineer to close the gap between the two.

I had dreams no less audacious at that age, I just never had the gumption to write the letter.

Thanks to Jay For the Link.