Fuedal Battles

By Shamus Posted Monday Feb 28, 2011

Filed under: Pictures 104 comments

Hey, speaking of advertising follies, here is an ad I saw last week:

fuedal.jpg

Fuedal battles? Sounds pretty good! But who are these guys kidding? Everyone knows the best strategy game is Roam: Toetal War.

 


 

Experienced Points: EA Intervention

By Shamus Posted Sunday Feb 27, 2011

Filed under: Column 194 comments

splash_deadspace2.jpg

This week’s column is part of my ongoing thesis about companies being a reflection of the values of their officers. People treat companies like black boxes – money goes in, products come out, and everything in between is a mystery. But the officers of a company determine the values of a company. Yes, companies exist to make money, but there’s a lot of room for individual interpretation of that mandate. People dismiss the EA marketing by claiming “that’s how marketing works”, but is it?


Link (YouTube)

I can’t think of any other game company that ever made something so insulting to gamers. What if the marketing for the movie Aliens only talked about how much blood and guts it contained, and how much your mom wouldn’t want you to see it? That sort of approach degrades both the product and the intended customer. This one even went so far as to go after your mom. (Hey, your mom is clueless and paranoid, right? Right?) Moreover, it takes a very special brand of self-destructive stupidity to produce a commercial where a mother says, “I think a game like his would make a person insane”, while the supreme court is hearing a case on banning violent videogames.

This is a reflection of how the people at EA see their audience, and it’s more grotesque than anything you might see in Dead Space 2.

Character matters.

 


 

Dragon Age 2 Demo:
The Kids Are Alright

By Josh Posted Friday Feb 25, 2011

Filed under: Game Reviews 228 comments

I’m not sure how much we talk about this in our endless discussions of what game to do next and how much of it actually ends up in our Spoiler Warning episodes, so let me state this straight out: I’m really the only member of the Spoiler Warning cast that actually liked the first Dragon Age. And I’ll be the first to admit it had its flaws: The combat in particular was punishing, slow, and repetitive, and the game was heavily padded with endless stretches of it. But I rather liked the story, and the game managed to flesh out a surprising amount of lore â€" it treated the various factions as organizations with their own plans and ideas, rather than simply as hats for certain characters to wear. And, hell â€" I’m a sucker for stories where shady cutthroat politics take front and center seat.

So it should go without saying that I’m excited at the idea of a sequel to Dragon Age. But at the same time, I went into the demo with no small degree of trepidation. I’d been excited for Mass Effect 2 as well, and… well, the less I start ranting about that game, the better. I’ve been worried for some time that the design philosophy that went into Mass Effect’s sequel would become a trend at BioWare â€" where “streamlining” things translates to simply removing all of the RPG elements, and where making characters “interesting” means “Everyone should be a badass! Yeah! Explosions!” And while it may be untoward to start pointing fingers without any clear facts, it probably is worth mentioning that Mass Effect 2 was the first project BioWare started after it was acquired by EA (Dragon Age, while released after the acquisition, was announced way back at E3 2004, making it nearly as old â€" if not older â€" than Jade Empire).

Continue reading ⟩⟩ “Dragon Age 2 Demo:
The Kids Are Alright”

 


 

Spoiler Warning S4E44: Reginald Gethbert

By Shamus Posted Friday Feb 25, 2011

Filed under: Spoiler Warning 234 comments


Link (YouTube)

This game is the Jekyll & Hyde of storytelling. Last episode was Commander Shepard vs. Common Sense. Now we’re meeting a Geth and visiting the Migrant Fleet. With a Geth.

I was actually very sorry when our session ended this week, because I wanted to keep going with this mission.

 


 

Spoiler Warning S4E43: Evidence? What Evidence?

By Shamus Posted Thursday Feb 24, 2011

Filed under: Spoiler Warning 139 comments


Link (YouTube)

We were off-topic for nearly the entire episode. In case you missed some of the references, allow me to spot you a few URL’s to provide you with needed enlightenment:

We talked about the movie Short Circuit, which featured Jonny 5, the self-aware robot made from mid-1980’s microprocessors. I mentioned the 8086 processor, which is to the personal computers what the Model T was to automobiles: Not particularly good. But it was cheap and useful, and thus the beginning of a revolution.

Rutskarn mentioned Nostalgia critic. I’ve heard of this site before, but never checked it out until now. True story: This post would have been up an hour ago if I didn’t just sink a bunch of time into watching 80’s TV commercials.

Rutskarn, Mumbles, and I are all playing Echo Bazaar, a Victorian Gothic-styled social networking game. I’m a big fan. It shows that the new wave of casual social games don’t need to be more mind-numbing Farmville knockoffs. The writing is smart and fun. The setting is exquisite, but daunting. My own Victorian London (yes, I’m talking about my unpublished book again, I have officially become THAT GUY) isn’t anywhere near as vivid.

Rutskarn mentioned MDK 2, which was an excellent game. And this conversation reminds me that I haven’t seen my copy in ages. It’s not on my shelf. I can’t even remember what the box looked like. I must have lent it out years ago and never got it back. Hm.

When I asked Rutskarn, “how do you type whilst wearing gentleman’s sport gloves?”, it was a reference to Old Timey Strong Bad.

 


 

Click on Felicia Day

By Shamus Posted Wednesday Feb 23, 2011

Filed under: Video Games 89 comments

So I went to the Dragon Age 2 site to download the demo. I’m too busy to actually play the game, but, you know… Dragon Age. I got through the age verification thing by lying and telling it I was still 30. Stupid thing believed me. You know, if we’re going to expect these age verification things to work we need to stop teaching math in schools. I’m just saying, if we continue to recklessly teach our children to subtract one number from another, then they’ll be able to figure out how to lie to a website about their age. If that happens, then children of absent, uninvolved, and apathetic parents will be able to access violent videogames. Imagine the damage those kids will experience. I mean, the damage from the game, not the damage from having screwed up parents. Hang on. What were we talking about again?

Oh yeah. Dragon Age 2. Right. Thanks.

So anyway, I was on the website when I saw this:

Continue reading ⟩⟩ “Click on Felicia Day”

 


 

Spoiler Warning S4E42: What Are We Doing?

By Shamus Posted Wednesday Feb 23, 2011

Filed under: Spoiler Warning 136 comments

And we’re back on the ranting.


Link (YouTube)

Here again we find ourselves interacting with the main plot, and once again the whole story flies apart. The reaper has been here for 5 million years, or one hundred reaper cycles. Yet none of the last 100 races managed to find it, destroy, or make use of it, or whatever.

And then we find it. Somehow. And we find out Cerberus has been here, dumped a bunch of scientists here with no real goal, and then forgot about them. And they all died. Just like all the other Cerberus cells, they wasted many lives and much money doing things that wouldn’t advance their stated goals even if they worked.

Now, remember that the council doesn’t believe that the reapers exist. (Which is preposterous, but let’s just ignore that for the sake of keeping this post under 1,000 words.) The council’s disbelief is the only reason we’re teamed up with these criminal racist murdering lying stooges. But we don’t use this reaper hulk to prove that reapers exist.

The only reason we’re going on board is to get a reaper IFF. And the only reason we’re doing that is so we can go through the Omega-4 relay to fight the Collectors. Of course, that’s stupid. If our only goal is to stop the collectors, then it’s way better to camp on OUR SIDE of the Omega-4 relay. Throw down some mines. Wait for them to run into the mines, then blast them. Problem solved.

Now you could argue that our real goal isn’t to just blow up the reaper ship, but to go through the relay and get our hands on that great reaper tech. Except the game designers portray this choice as unambiguously evil.

And Legion, who has been looking for us, shows up here? Was he able to predict that we would come here, or was he just amazingly lucky. (This point might actually be addressed somewhere in Legion’s dialog. In any case, this is a minor point and not nearly the immersion-breaker that the other points are.)

So sum up:

* Cerberus acted like idiots
* Shepard acted like an idiot
* The past 100 harvest races, while not entirely idiots, might have done better if they had found the reaper.
* The council are idiots
* Legion probably could have been making better use of his time
* The writers are not exactly making a fearsome display of mental prowess either. This is not a complicated plot, and it shouldn’t have this many problems.

So, par for the course?

Man, get me outta this main plot and back to the loyalty missions.