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StarCraft II – First Impressions

July 30th, 2010 David 2 comments

I’ve now completed seven missions of the StarCraft II campaign and I’m impressed.

I’m not typically a fan of Real Time Strategy games, and I was even on the fence as to whether I’d get StarCraft II or not. The last RTS that I really enjoyed was Company of Heroes, but that was strictly multiplayer; I still have yet to play the campaign in that game. The last RTS that I played through to completion was the original Dawn of War. Prior to that, it was probably the original StarCraft, although I never played through Brood Wars. My favourite RTS of all time is probably Total Annihilation, but again, that was mostly multiplayer.

The main problem I had with RTS games was that they all felt more or less the same. Gather resources, build up your base, build your forces, and then send them out to get the bad guys. StarCraft II however, has shown enough variety in the few missions that I’ve played so far to make it feel different from all the games that came before it.

The first mission I came across that got my attention was Outbreak, where the Zerg would attack your base at night and then disappear during the day, at which point you could run out and destroy as many of their buildings as you could before night fell again and had to brace yourself for their attack.

The other mission that I’ve really enjoyed is The Great Train Robbery, which tasks you with stopping trains that travel across the map at different intervals. It kept me on my toes for sure.

The game has thus far lived up to its hype for me, and more importantly, has kept this RTS non-fan eager to keep going.

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Free To Play

July 28th, 2010 David No comments

My daughter is away this week, visiting her grandparents at their cabin on the lake, and my wife will be away in Vancouver for a few days for work.  That means I’ll be home by myself, with just my dog to take care of, which subsequently means I’ll be free to play whatever games I want, and be as irresponsible with my time as I choose to be.  Of course I miss my wife and daughter, that goes without saying, but still… guilt-free gaming baby!

I’ll be spending some quality time with StarCraft II tonight, no doubt.  I played the first three missions of the campaign last night and I like it so far.  I’ll hopefully have some more impressions of it at a later date.

What I really meant to post about was the news that EverQuest II was going to introduce a free-to-play server.  You can read all the details at the official site, here: http://everquest2.com/news/read/current/3630.

I’ve said it many times before, that I loved EverQuest II back when I played it, and hopefully this move does something to introduce the game to new players.  It used to drive me nuts to hear people put the game down without having tried it.  I’ll definitely be trying it out again myself.  It’s too bad I won’t have access to my existing characters, but they’ve been dormant long enough that I probably wouldn’t know how to play them anyway.

My only concern is that this move may prove to be too little too late.   The last time I was in EQII (free period just before the release of Sentinel’s Fate) it really showed its age and it couldn’t hook me in.  I can’t see anything having changed since then.  It’ll be nice to have the option of poking my head in now and then though.

I’m actually a little surprised that EQII was the game that SOE decided to try the free-to-play model on (aside from Free Realms of course).  I was hoping Vanguard would be the first to go that route.  I would love to play that game some more, I just can’t justify paying for it.

New PC Arrives, Happiness Ensues

July 16th, 2010 David 1 comment

My new computer arrived early last week, and it’s awesome.  The box arrived while I was at work and my wife, who had the day off, called me to let me know it had come.  That made for one of the longest work days in my career.  I felt like a kid just waiting for Christmas morning, wanting to race for the tree to rip open everything underneath it. 

After unboxing it and setting it all up, I turned it on and almost went deaf.  It sounded like a jet engine taking off, and I knew right away that something had to be wrong, there was no way my glorious new PC was supposed to be this loud.  It didn’t take long to figure out that the thermal control program was set by default to run the hard drive and graphics card fans constantly at 100%.  A quick fix later and my liquid-cooled PC went completely silent, and I was relieved.

Rather than dive into some games right away though, I instead wiped out the factory installation and put on a nice, fresh copy of Windows 7 Ultimate from scratch.  Then I installed Steam and proceeded to download all my games from there.  Unfortunately this was right in the middle of one of Steam’s crazy sales and the downloads were going super slow.  So I just let it run over night, and through the following day.  By the time I got home from work that day all of my Steam games were downloaded and waiting to be played.  I still wasn’t ready to play anything though, because I wanted to install all of my non-Steam games.  This process took way longer than I ever thought it would (Company of Heroes = worst installation ever in the history of anything), but eventually I got everything up and running and I’m now playing games again, and my oh my, what a difference from my old PC.

My old PC is a single-core, Pentium 4 3.4GHz with 3GB RAM and an AGP Radeon 3850, and for the past two months the graphics card was off being RMA’d, so I was running with the Radeon 9800XT that originally came with the PC.  My new PC is an i7-960 quad core, 3.2GHz with 12GB RAM, a Radeon 5870, and two hard drives totalling 2.5TB of space.  Needless to say, there is a significant difference between the two computers.  I can once again run games at their max settings!  So what have I spent my time playing?

World of Warcraft

Yes, I finally get a new PC and I still end up spending most of my time with a game that looked and ran just fine on my old rig.  Of course now it looks and runs even better.  I was quite surprised actually at how nice the game looks.  It has aged very well.  Pictured above is my new Orc Warrior.  Apparently the game doesn’t appeal to me at level 80 because as soon as my Mage dinged 80 I more-or-less abondoned him to start all over with this guy.  I’m hoping to get through as much content as possible before Cataclysm, as I’ve never levelled a Horde character.  So far, level 23 as of this writing, it’s been fun and a nice change from playing Alliance.  I’m on a PvP server again, but have yet to have any PvP encounters, although I’ve only recently ventured into contested zones.

Starting this new character has reaffirmed to me just how much I like this game.  Damn you WoW.

Call of Duty 4

I actually played a few levels of this on my old PC, and I fully believed that it ran just fine.  Playing on my new PC however, with settings cranked, proves to me just how deluded I was.  This is a fantastic looking game, and this is even an “old” Call of Duty, not Modern Warfare 2.  I’m still not entirely sure though if I love the gameplay.  It’s a little too “on rails” for me, and it feels like I’m just moving from one set piece to the next.  I’m curious to see how the story plays out though, so I’ll keep playing it in bits here and there.

Far Cry 2

I picked this up on a whim for $12 the other day.  I’m still early in the game, but so far I love it.  Unlike Call of Duty, Far Cry 2 feels wide open, like I can do whatever, and go wherever I like.  It’s also one of the most gorgeous games I’ve ever seen.  I was originally going to track down Crysis because I wanted a game to “show off”, to convince my wife that this new PC was worth the price, but after reading some reviews and watching some gameplay videos, I didn’t think I’d like Crysis all that much.  I didn’t know much about Far Cry 2; I had played the first one and really enjoyed it up until I started fighting mutants and other creatures.  I just wanted to kill other people damnit.  My understanding is that the sequel is quite a bit different, and so far that has been true.  I like it, and will probably spend most of my gaming time outside of WoW with this one.

Those are the three games I’ve been playing.  I’m also planning on finally getting to Dragon Age: Origins, but it’s still not pulling me just yet.  I don’t know what it is; I want to play it, but I also sort of don’t.   It’s a weird feeling.  Also on my list is Left 4 Dead 2 which I picked up for $10 thanks to the previously mentioned crazy Steam sale, along with Torchlight.  Although, with Torchlight, just before I put it in my virtual cart I said to myself, “I’ll probably never play this, but it’s only $5″, and I bought it.  We’ll see.

The only thing I’m sort of regretting with the new PC is not getting a dedicated sound card.  I figured the onboard would be good enough, but I’m kind of wishing I had gotten one.  I may be picking one up soon.  I love new toys.

That’s What

July 3rd, 2010 David No comments

To answer my own question of “Now What?“, I have given my freshly level-capped Frost Mage the cold shoulder and started a new character, this time an Orc Warrior.

The highest that I’ve leveled a Horde character is 23, so I haven’t seen a whole lot of the Horde side of the game, and I suppose with the Cataclysm coming soon, this will be my last chance to see the “old world” from the Horde perspective.  I’m guessing I’ll have about two months before Cataclysm comes out, so I don’t think I’ll get too far with this Warrior before I’m re-rolling yet again to see the Cataclysm stuff.

This new character of mine is level 17 as of this writing.  I’m actually on vacation at the moment, visiting with my sister, and in what must count as one of the saddest things I’ve done in a while, I downloaded the WoW client to her MacBook Pro within minutes of arriving here.  Like a junkie I just need my fix.  My excuse is that I’m an early riser and I’ve been able to play while waiting for everyone else to wake up.

The hardest part has been playing without a mouse, using only the touchpad.  That has taken some getting used to.  I’ll be back home in just a couple of days however, where I will eagerly await the arrival of my new PC.  I ordered an Alienware from Dell and the tracking information tells me it should be arriving the day after I get home.  WoW may actually take a back seat once the PC arrives, as I’ve been wanting to play Dragon Age for some time, but couldn’t bring myself to do it on my aging PC.  There are a few other games in my pile that I’ll be looking to check out on the new hardware as well.  Should be fun.