Archive for the ‘Games’ Category

This One’s For Dad

Monday, March 29th, 2010

The DSi XL was released yesterday and KLS got one.

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That’s the XL to the right in the above picture. As you can see the screen is much bigger (93% larger apparently) which makes for much easier reading and seeing – especially for old eyes.

The unit is comfortable to hold despite (or maybe because) of it’s larger size, and the new pen-sized stylus that comes with it is particularly great. In short – this is a no brainer purchase if you find the current DS screen difficult to see or if you just want to hold a more comfortable handheld.

I like it so much I’d certainly buy one myself, if it wasn’t for the just announced 3DS due sometime in the next 12 months.

Anyway, as hinted in the title, the main purpose of this review is to let my dad know he has to rush out and buy one of these guys the day they hit Australian stores on April 15 🙂

Addendum

Saturday, March 27th, 2010

I snapped this shot for the last post but forgot to include it:

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It’s a shot of the box in which I store my PSP games. About 80% of my collection can be seen in that image.

I’ve been updating my gamebooks page as well. It’s almost ‘done’. Detailed entry when it’s complete.

Happy Birthday PSP

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Five years ago yesterday the Playstation Portable was released in America.

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Above is pictured the limited edition, Japan only Monster Hunter lithographed PSP-3000. Although I don’t own this unit (and likely never will due to the price) I do own two different PSP handhelds.

I bought my first the day it was released: March 24 2005, the for (in retrospect) staggering price of $249.99. I also purchased 3 games for the system: Lumines, Metal Gear AC!D and Darkstalkers. From the start I was a fan of the system, and although the games were fun, it didn’t seem very long before I thought more about what games could be on the system than what actually was.

It would be about 18 months (during which I purchased 13 games) before the first truly astounding (for me) game was released on the PSP. Capcom took their hard-as-nails Monster Hunter series from the PS2, and relaunched it as a portable game series with Monster Hunter Freedom:

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I was all over this game. It was so perfectly suited to the PSP that finally the system appeared to have the game it was designed for. This would become – for many PSP users – the defining series for the system, so important to the brand that it would single-handedly allow the PSP to compete with the DS in Japan. In future years two more iterations of the series would be released:

mhf2 mhfu

Of course I purchased both and played them like a man possessed. I am not exaggerating when I say that of the 61 total PSP games I own (I bought one per month on average??), I have probably spent more time playing these three titles than the other 58 combined. They are ruthless, complex and impenetrable to casual gamers, but pure bliss for enthusiasts such as myself.

A day or two before Monster Hunter Freedom 2 was released I purchased the newly released PSP-2000 model (also known as the PSP ‘slim’), which was lighter, sexier, had longer battery life and at $170 was quite a bit less expensive. This is the model I still play today, although two newer versions have been released since (the incrementally updated PSP-3000 and the ill-fated and download-only PSP-Go).

As mentioned I have 61 games for the system, about 75% of which are RPGs. The most I have paid for a game is Y6300 (about US$60) for a very rare copy of the limited edition Wizardry Empire III (currently unplayed). The least I have paid I was $4.98 (Dragonball Evolutions, also currently unplayed).

The future of the system doesn’t seem rosy. Sales have been dropping sharply in the last year, and in recent months Sony has been releasing games in digital download-only format. This is probably to drive PSP-Go sales and probably to fight back against rampant piracy. As a game collector I’m not a big fan of digital downloads and refuse to buy any such games. This is problematic, since three such games are of interest to me (including Eye Of Judgement, however each were released on UMD in England so I hope to buy the disc during my trip.

Very few games have been announced that I am interested in (digital or non-digital) and it is difficult to imagine where the system will be a year from now. Many suspect a new PSP to be announced in the next few months (PSP2?), and were it not for the next Monster Hunter game as well as a few other quirky titles (which I doubt will even come stateside) I’d start thinking it’s almost time to pack up the system for good.

mhvshk < Quirky enough?

At five years old and 60-odd million sold the PSP can hardly be called a failure. And yet it is a system that has only a small handful of truly superb games on it. Given that amongst this handful are some of the best (albeit unforgivingly difficult and hardcore) games I have ever played (in ~30 years of gaming) it’s easy to see why I’m fond of the system. But objectively, I’d have to say that for most players the PSP has never quite lived up to its potential.

On The Topic Of…

Tuesday, January 26th, 2010

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David Tennants Last Episode…

RTD reached a new height in absurdist writing here, but the madness of the first hour or so was alleviated by the heart-wrenching last twenty minutes. My biggest problem was not the shrugging off of the Time War, the diamond, the single reference by the Master to Rassilon (eh??!) or even the fact that Donna was, apparently, ok. It was that the Doctor himself did virtually nothing in the entire episode. RTD’s worst scripts are common in that they are ones where the Doctor at best reacts rather than acts and this was perhaps the worst ever.

But then, well then something silly happened and then David Tennant was gone and Matt Smith yelled “geronimo”. I can’t wait for his season to start 🙂

havoc

Gamebooks…

I returned from Australia with a shocking 36 different gamebooks in my bags – from 16 different series! And since then I have bought 14 more on ebay. I suspect I have developed ‘a problem’ here, with the only cure getting each and every one! Is it possible? Yes. Likely? Nope.

But I can try!

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Games…

Anyone paying attention would know that 2010 is shaping up to be one of the best years for games in a long time. I still don’t have Bayonetta (although it’s on my birthday list) but next week both No More Heroes 2 and Tatsunoko vs Capcom is released. And within a couple of months we’ll have Monster Hunter Tri and Final Fantasy XIII as well…

I have, on my ‘games waiting to be played’ shelf, about twenty unopened boxes. And now this avalanche of gaming goodness begins.

What is a man to do?

Is This Playing The Game?

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

You may or may not have noticed the link to my PS3 trophies on the sidebar to the right, not to mention the post about it a while ago.

Also, I may or may not have mentioned one of the reasons I got out of WoW was I became aware that the only appeal the game had held for the last few weeks had been the achievements, and once I lost interest in them I realized I wasn’t enjoying the game any more.

Achievements in games are here to stay, and as long as youre score is public then they are – for many – a badge of honour. They can be fun, they can be frustrating, they can be addicting, they can be irritating. They are a double edged sword, and for some players, they are (in my opinion) dangerous indeed.

Read this very interesting article to see what I mean.

I have mixed feelings. Yes, I have done stuff in games/WoW just to get an achievement, but I’d never consider playing a game that wasn’t fun just for the achievements. As for the achievements themselves, well I think they are wonderful. For instance, I’d love for them to have been around forever, and to browse through nearly 30 years of my gaming career in the form of achievements… such as:

“UFO Get” – Shoot down your first UFO (obtained XX/XX/78)