Since I finished Starfield. I've had an itch for more space exploration. I decided to get back into Elite Dangerous. I haven't played it for a good couple years. I bought the latest DLC for it when it was released. I just never got around to playing it. I'm absolutely loving the space legs.
I've been going from system to system. Mapping each planet and moon. Landing on those that I can. Exploring for geological features and biology samples. All while marathoning my favourite YouTube channels.
Elite and Starfield are like night and day. In Starfield, you can't actually fly through space and it's more of a decoration, while in Elite you're there from the liftoff, to the travel, to the descent.
I recently tried Original Sin 2 two weeks ago with the Baldur's Gate craze. I'm not really a RPG player but I wanted to try it to make sure I wasn't missing anything.
I started South Park The Stick of Truth.
I never was a big fan, I only ever watched a handful of South Park episodes back then. Regardless, it's pretty good even if you haven't watched most of it.
For sure, if you absolutely hate South Park, maybe don't get this...
But if like me you just never really got that much into it or haven't really kept up with it, it's absolutely fine.
Anyhow
In it, you start playing as a mute South Park newcomer protagonist who himself joins a town-wide bunch of LARPERs in an adventure that goes off the rails.
It doesn't shy from breaking the fourth wall.
It's utterly fucking stupid at times, which is expected.
Love that game. Had a joint playthrough with some of my friends back in college. Well I mostly watched and smoked weed, but I was there. I've also only seen a handful of South Park episodes but that game was a fun experience.
It's very fun. I also really enjoyed the sequel, even if it felt like it lost some of its charme and attention to detail in exchange for scope and combat depth. Felt a little harsh to switch to the next one, but I had a lot of fun either way.
I recently finished Hyper Light Drifter. It was decent, pretty good level of challenge in boss battles or when the enemies surround you. Backtracking to find secrets was a chore though. And cloud saves didn't work which was a bummer.
Before that was another attempt to enjoy No Man's Sky. I just can't do it, too many bafflingly stupid design decisions.
Now I'm loading Red Dead Redemption 2 onto my Steam Deck. Finally time to undertake what I hope to be my favorite wild west adventure ever.
I might start RDR2 alongside you. The controls and lack of time have kept me away from the game, but I have been itching for a game like it for such a long time.
Quake 4, bog standard 7th gen corridor shooter and the half way point makes the game slightly more tolerable, just enough to be considered 'good'. On the bright side the lighting is great in darker areas, something that iD Tech 4 games excel at. I don't know why most modern games dark areas look like you're walking downtown at 9pm, when it should be much darker depending on the game.
Homeworld remastered. I saw deserts of karak on sale for like $4 but then realized I own the remaster somehow and never played it. Probably humble bundle. Only a few missions in but has a surprising complexity for a 20 year old RTS
I just finished Hexalogic and Grand Mountain Adventure: Wonderlands, and both are fantastic. The first is an interesting take on sudoku that gets pretty challenging near the end, and the second is what happens if you blow up Ski Free to a full length game.
Other than that, continuing on with Mass Effect Legendary (first ME playthrough), Skyward Sword, and Blasphemous: Wounds of Eventide. I'm almost done with Zelda, and I'll probably switch to Tokyo Xanadu Ex+ afterward. I'm near the start with the others, and I'll probably play some small games here and there.
My patient game would be Slay the spire, I still play it on either switch or Android several times a week.
However, this year I did something unusual for myself and not patient: I bought Zelda: tears of the kingdom (I did wait about a month after release). Ive already put probably 300 hours into it, and still have quite a bit more I can do, so the $/hour of entertainment value there I don't think ive matched.
When I'm not playing baldurs gate 3, I'm stopping in on baldurs gate 1 which I didn't play back in the day(I only had 2), The original kingdom hearts, a second playthrough of final fantasy remake in anticipation of rebirth, outer worlds, midnight Suns, guardians of the Galaxy, star ocean the last hope, and thr ever present vampire Survivors and Binding of Isaac. I've been hopping games frequently recently.
I admire your ability to keep track of all that. I actively play FF14 to fill my MMO slot and then some other game that is my mainstay at the time. If I dare even touch another serious title, it tends to completely push out the prior one, so I have been really trying hard not to start another bigger game while I'm not done with the last one.
It's how I've been playing Yakuza 0 for the last entire year, coming back every half eternity. I really need to just sit down and play a title or take forever.
Ff14 is the reason my Backlog got as bad as it did. My plan was to quit after end walker but instead I never even finished the story and I hate myself for it cause I played since 1.0, but every time I go back I just keep thinking of every other game I could be playing instead and don't wind up playing more than an hour.
If this is your first total war experience, then I can see why you like it, but Troy is by far and away NOT the best of the total war games. Honestly, the further back you go, the better they are. Shogun 2 and Medieval 2 are absolutely fantastic games, with deeper mechanics than many of the more modern ones.
Shogun 2 and older games massively lose out on the UX. Especially in combat, the games have much less quality of life.
Furthermore, the newer games simply work towards a somewhat different audience. The studio has clearly picked up on the success of Warhammer and after stumbling both through all of Three Kingdoms and the launch of Troy, they seem to have firmly settled towards the more fantasy direction which is counter to the philosophy of the earlier games.
While I certainly support trying out the older titles too, calling Troy a simply worse game than the older titles is a bit reductionistic and definitely has a personal bias and may be somewhat misleading, even if your advice was in good faith.
Agreed I don't know why it gets so much hate. I mean the poison spitting statue in the dark level is pretty frustrating and the graphics are what you expect from an old game but I had a heap of fun with it.
Same, but it was my first FROMSOFT launch game with absolute bustling multiplayer activity so I know I‘m biased lol, it‘s even my fav. Had an absolutely based 2H faith build.
I started playing Stray on my Steam Deck a while back. It runs pretty much perfectly but I've got some problems with my left hand (I suffered a stroke last year) so I had to give up after a while. I too really loved the environment. The game is beautiful. I can't wait for my hand to get better, so I can finish it.
Recently completed Dark Souls for the first time. I'm not sure if I enjoyed it, but it was a unique experience.
Started Monster Hunter Rise on PC. Some things feel a bit "off" but it's enjoyable (I actually tried playing on Switch when the game released, but it was miserable)
Other than Metroid Dread, I also enjoyed Hardspace: Shipbreaker recently. There's certainly joy to be had in doing a (sometimes) simple job well, and it keeps you on your toes just enough. Major bonus points for a story and characters that struck a lot of the same dystopian chords that Papers, Please did. Just, ya know, in space. I will absolutely play another game in this universe if one comes out.
I'll throw down the factorio card for this week.
Trying it out on the steam deck. Plays pretty good so far. Bit clunky in the controls, but I'll keep messing around with them. Plus it's great for the pick up and play, although I'll prob need to leave notes or something when things get more complex so I don't lose the thread
I play a match or two at nigth with a friend and it's always a lot of fun. Everything from the people to the mechanics are enjoyable. At the beginning it was a bit confusing but I've gotten used to it.