Wednesday, February 28, 2024

Dead Space (2023)

In last year's January, EA released a remake of their 2008 third person survival horror shooter, Dead Space. The remake was developed by Motive Studio, which I believe is the place BioWare Montreal's people were largely shuffled into after they were shutdown in the aftermath of Mass Effect: Andromeda. How many of the actual same people were involved, is unknown to me. But like that game, does this remake too run on EA's in-house Frostbite engine.

Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Lies of P

The reasons for my rule of not touching games developed by Japanese studios are many. (I should start writing them down; I feel like I've started forgetting them.) And that rule still holds. South Korea is culturally and geographically close to Japan -- at least when viewed from here -- but I haven't needed to think if they are close enough for Korean games to be included in the prohibition of mine. For the longest time South Korean studios seemed to release only pay-to-win MMORPGs in the West and those are easy for to me to ignore. But now there's Lies of P, a third person soulslike action roleplaying game released in September last year. It was on Game Pass day-one but I decided to wait for bug fixes and balance adjustments.

Saturday, February 24, 2024

Gotham Knights

I wonder if Gotham Knights had a development story akin to Redfall in how it was maybe intended to be a live service title but then, for whatever reason, pivoted away from it before release. Perhaps Warner Bros. as a publisher and/or the developer studio in Montreal decided it had no staying power. Or WB deemed the then-still-in-development and now recently-released Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League more fitting as their title for Batman universe microtransactions.

Friday, February 23, 2024

Children of Memory

Children of Memory by Adrian Tchaikovsky was a big disappointment for me after the great Children of Ruin. I found the second book such an improvement after Children of Time that I suppose I had hoped this third one to be even better.

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Assassin's Creed Liberation Remastered

Assassin's Creed III: Liberation (2012) was originally a PlayStation Vita game. A year and a half later it was re-released on more powerful platforms as a beautified version, titled Assassin's Creed Liberation HD. And then, years later the game was included in Assassin's Creed III Remastered likewise as a Remastered version. I have a feeling the HD and Remastered versions are identical apart from online features having been removed from the latter.

Sunday, February 18, 2024

Assassin's Creed III Remastered

I finally got back to continuing my Assassin's Creed franchise run. The next game on the list was Assassin's Creed III (2012) and specifically its 7 years newer Remastered version. I was previously perplexed why Ubisoft had remastered this particular one but the reason really is obvious. It's the same as always: money. They had a good window to sell the same game again on a newer console generation.

Sunday, February 11, 2024

Disco Elysium

When I listed my top 10 favorite games of the 2010s back in June of 2020, I wrote I was doubtful there would be a need to add anything from the decade's games I hadn't yet played at that point. However, there was one game from 2019 that I was thinking would make the list once I got to it: Disco Elysium. I didn't want to drop anything from the list now so I have just added this masterpiece as a +1 to it.

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

The Shadow of the Torturer

Yet another novel that was on my reading list and whose source of recommendation I had no recollection any longer: The Shadow of the Torturer by Gene Wolfe. The back cover (the little I peeked at it) claimed it to be a science fiction classic (published in 1980) and apparently Neil Gaiman at some point rated it above Neuromancer and The Left Hand of Darkness on his list of the three greatest scifi novels. I wouldn't myself think of it that highly and I'm not so sure about the science fiction either.

Sunday, February 4, 2024

Revelation Space

If Frank Herbert's Dune is an example of older science fiction literature of simpler narrative and shorter books, Revelation Space by Alastair Reynolds is from the other end of the spectrum, being newer (though almost 24 years old too by now) and having three very disconnected (at least initially) layers. I had trouble keeping up with the fast-paced viewpoint switching early on in fact. Only around page 130 of the 700-page Finnish translation I noted myself having started to remember who's who.