Game you're playing. How far you are.
- SenisterDenister
- Haha you're still not there yet
- Posts: 3536
- Joined: Mon Apr 23, 2007 3:03 pm
- Location: Cackalackyland
- SenisterDenister
- Haha you're still not there yet
- Posts: 3536
- Joined: Mon Apr 23, 2007 3:03 pm
- Location: Cackalackyland
-
- 250 Posts til Somewhere
- Posts: 2847
- Joined: Wed Jun 05, 2002 11:21 am
- Location: Going to School.
My wife and son have DS/3DS, but I've never gotten into them.
I got on those garage sale sites on facebook and sold a bunch of old junk and now I've got a fairly nice collection of Vita games. Can't wait for the next exploit game to be released so I can load a custom firmware. Looking forward to playing all my old PSX, PSP, and emulator games with actual controls. I know my phone and tablet can do it, but the hassle of carting around a separate controller (or just using the on-screen controls) sucks.
I picked up a PSP right before I got the Vita by trading a couple bicycles. It was sort of my test system so I could figure out how to modify the firmwares and get familiar with the terms. I've got it running all the emulators and all the rest, too, BUT the Vita has a bigger screen, better sound, better controls and some pretty tight games being released for it, still.
PSP will be given to the kid as soon as I've got the Vita properly exploited.
I got on those garage sale sites on facebook and sold a bunch of old junk and now I've got a fairly nice collection of Vita games. Can't wait for the next exploit game to be released so I can load a custom firmware. Looking forward to playing all my old PSX, PSP, and emulator games with actual controls. I know my phone and tablet can do it, but the hassle of carting around a separate controller (or just using the on-screen controls) sucks.
I picked up a PSP right before I got the Vita by trading a couple bicycles. It was sort of my test system so I could figure out how to modify the firmwares and get familiar with the terms. I've got it running all the emulators and all the rest, too, BUT the Vita has a bigger screen, better sound, better controls and some pretty tight games being released for it, still.
PSP will be given to the kid as soon as I've got the Vita properly exploited.
- SenisterDenister
- Haha you're still not there yet
- Posts: 3536
- Joined: Mon Apr 23, 2007 3:03 pm
- Location: Cackalackyland
-
- 250 Posts til Somewhere
- Posts: 2847
- Joined: Wed Jun 05, 2002 11:21 am
- Location: Going to School.
- RobertHouse
- Vault Dweller
- Posts: 121
- Joined: Mon Apr 07, 2014 2:50 pm
I had a PSP once and a DS, the PSP was a lot of fun but it got misplaced "some how" with my friends PSP that had a cracked screen, mine flew to San Diego and never returned, his screen got smashed after...Manoil wrote:Shit's bananas, yo.
I never got around to buying another one after that, instead i got a PS3.
Still not sure about another hand held device, Vita... maybe?? Maybe not??
There is a lot of things i could buy with that money, i like saving but every now and then it's nice to give your self something.
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- 250 Posts til Somewhere
- Posts: 2847
- Joined: Wed Jun 05, 2002 11:21 am
- Location: Going to School.
I got another PSP....I could rarely get the one we have away from my son or wife so dropped another $50. Good thing I've been selling lots of old crap to feed my habit.
I would hold off on getting a Vita until there is some sort of kernel hack. As it is, you can only hack the PSP emulator running on the Vita, so no point as of yet. There was a recent exploit for J/EU gamers, but nothing available in the US, nor will there be.
I would hold off on getting a Vita until there is some sort of kernel hack. As it is, you can only hack the PSP emulator running on the Vita, so no point as of yet. There was a recent exploit for J/EU gamers, but nothing available in the US, nor will there be.
- Wolfman Walt
- Mamma's Gang member
- Posts: 5243
- Joined: Sat Mar 15, 2003 1:31 pm
- Location: La Grange, Kentucky
- Contact:
- SenisterDenister
- Haha you're still not there yet
- Posts: 3536
- Joined: Mon Apr 23, 2007 3:03 pm
- Location: Cackalackyland
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- Wanderer
- Posts: 442
- Joined: Mon Feb 12, 2007 9:38 am
- Location: Still there.
:wasteland2:
I played diablo2, coming back after years I was put off by the graphics and small resolution, thinking "Wait, did this always look so blocky?". Yes, yes it did. Now WoW looks so sharp compared to D2 you'd think it was new or something. My eyesight has gone downhill since then so my old ass can't see that extra 1080p basket anyway.
The gaming industry is just that; gaming industry. It's predictable enough now to sell stocks for game companies, to have an army of computer science colleges dedicated to pumping out new developers. No one pulls a John Romero anymore, you'll ruin yourself.
I played diablo2, coming back after years I was put off by the graphics and small resolution, thinking "Wait, did this always look so blocky?". Yes, yes it did. Now WoW looks so sharp compared to D2 you'd think it was new or something. My eyesight has gone downhill since then so my old ass can't see that extra 1080p basket anyway.
The gaming industry is just that; gaming industry. It's predictable enough now to sell stocks for game companies, to have an army of computer science colleges dedicated to pumping out new developers. No one pulls a John Romero anymore, you'll ruin yourself.
<SILENT DEATH GLARE>
I'd recommend against ever replaying it, then. The façade of agency is very fragile.
Also, you might like The Wolf Among Us. It's TWD but with neon and fursonas instead of zombies.
Also, you might like The Wolf Among Us. It's TWD but with neon and fursonas instead of zombies.
- Wolfman Walt
- Mamma's Gang member
- Posts: 5243
- Joined: Sat Mar 15, 2003 1:31 pm
- Location: La Grange, Kentucky
- Contact:
Re: <SILENT DEATH GLARE>
Have you ever read the comic? I always heard it was pretty good. The comic. I've heard the games are sometimes abit uneven but generally good.Blargh wrote:Also, you might like The Wolf Among Us. It's TWD but with neon and fursonas instead of zombies. :drunk:
Disappointment is coming.
I read a few of issues, several years ago, before becoming distracted by other things. Have yet (and, if I'm honest, am unlikely) to return to it. I recall that I found it entertaining that essentially every character is an insufferable prick.
TWAU is a prequel, naturally, and I'm fairly confident that it shouldn't spoil experience of the comic. That said, TWAU does lose momentum around episode three - apparently it suffered a mid-production rewrite due to rabid theorycrafters getting a bit too close to the intended original narrative arc. An example of why I'm not fond of <strike>the Internet</strike> <strike>the people who use the Internet</strike> episodic games. I imagine the issue with pacing is probably worse if one were to play through before all five chapters were released. Despite the tension petering out, it was amusing to run through as maximum arsehole Bigby - tearing off arms, gouging eyes and generally giving no fucks for the hypocrisy, narcicism and sophistry of Fabletown. Good music and solid voicework, too. Doubt it would hold up too well to the scrutiny of a repeat playthrough, though, but that's down to Telltale and their game design conceits.
I wonder if they'll implement skippable cutscenes and dialogue for their take on Borderlands and Game of Thrones . . ?
Wishful thinking.
TWAU is a prequel, naturally, and I'm fairly confident that it shouldn't spoil experience of the comic. That said, TWAU does lose momentum around episode three - apparently it suffered a mid-production rewrite due to rabid theorycrafters getting a bit too close to the intended original narrative arc. An example of why I'm not fond of <strike>the Internet</strike> <strike>the people who use the Internet</strike> episodic games. I imagine the issue with pacing is probably worse if one were to play through before all five chapters were released. Despite the tension petering out, it was amusing to run through as maximum arsehole Bigby - tearing off arms, gouging eyes and generally giving no fucks for the hypocrisy, narcicism and sophistry of Fabletown. Good music and solid voicework, too. Doubt it would hold up too well to the scrutiny of a repeat playthrough, though, but that's down to Telltale and their game design conceits.
I wonder if they'll implement skippable cutscenes and dialogue for their take on Borderlands and Game of Thrones . . ?
Wishful thinking.