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gaming update: Far Cry, Civilization, Dark Souls


On 04/10/2013 at 03:14 PM by Michael117

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Last month I bought Bioshock Infinite and Far Cry 3. I recently posted my spoiler-free review of Bioshock to let you know how the game turned out, and once I was finished I hopped right into Far Cry 3, an open world stealth action shooter that I've been looking forward to for some time. Playing these two games back to back is a lot of shooter to take in, so I also took a break from the shooters to get some strategy and RPG time in lately as well.

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Far Cry 3

This game has been a mixed bag, but the parts of it that I love are so fantastic that it's a net gain instead of a loss. I'm close to beating the game, I'm deep into the second of the two major islands that make up the game world. So far the biggest negatives about the game come from the characters and narrative. All the captured friends you're trying to save are unlikeable, all the natives you're fighting for are unlikeable, and if a great tsunami came and swallowed every soul on these two islands the world wouldn't care. But the gameplay and system-design is fantastic and turned out to be everything I was hoping for. The reason I bought this game was because of the stealth gameplay, the sandbox, and how all the various systems allow for emergent unscripted carnage.

The gameplay loop that keeps me playing this game is: activating radio towers (like in Assassin's Creed) to unveil new swaths of the map, unlocking new weapons and upgrading them, finding all the enemy outposts in the newly unveiled territory and conquering them with stealth until I need to go activate the next radio tower and find more to conquer. I really enjoy attacking outposts, every single one is like a perfectly sized mission in itself. Securing new outposts is not only fun but the incentive to do it is that you gain a new fast-travel location, the pirate presence in the area becomes weaker so you may travel safer, and there's loot. When I come across new outposts I stalk around in the hills, forests, or whatever vantage points are outside the area, I pull out my camera, tag all the enemies I find so I can track them, and then I begin a systematic process of silently killing every guard in any method I can while remaining undetected. If you secure the area without being detected you gain a massive XP reward. You can play without stealth and Rambo your way through the outposts if you want, it's still very satisfying and much faster, but I prefer being undetected. You can even lure in nearby wild animals like tigers to help you, or you may find dangerous animals in cages around the camps in which case you can shoot the cage and release them to chaotic results.

Besides assaulting outposts, my other favorite thing to do is just roam around. Because of the system-design and the possibility of emergent gameplay, the craziest things that can happen to you in Far Cry 3 will occur when you're not expecting anything to happen. When you're on the road going from point A to B, or out in the wilds gathering an herb for a potion, or just looking at the scenery. Complete chaos and excitement can arise from nothingness and turn a routine drive down the dirt road into an unforgettable moment of its own. One time I was poking around some abandoned shacks to get a loot chest when I heard a commotion from pirates outside. Some enemies were driving down the road, saw my car outside and stopped to check things out, turning my random loot-grabbing into a moment of suspense and dread. Then they all suddenly got into a crazy fight with a group of Komodo dragons that were coming down from the hillsides near the shack I was hiding in. I sneaked around avoiding detection from both parties, assassinated a pirate and pulled him into a bush, and ultimately helped the animals kill all the pirates. However once all the pirates were dead I was left standing tall with four Komodo's ready to chase me down, and they did. All the way to the nearby river which I dove into, got mauled by a terrifying alligator, barely escaped the river with my life just to find a forest fire spreading on the other side because I guess some kind of unrelated chaos was happening over there that I had no idea was occurring until I wandered into it.

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Civilization Revolution

Bioshock and Far Cry are great games but I needed a break from all the shooting, so one game I've been playing a lot is Civ Rev. Civilization is always a perfect go-to game for me that I can enjoy no matter what the mood. I like to play against the CPU and I've nestled into the King level difficulty setting for now because it allows me to play the defensive turtle style I enjoy while always being engaged by the enemy Civs. It's quite challenging early on, people are always at war with me, and you have to make the right choices at the right times to create defensive units to protect your cities, build infrastructure to improve cities, and do research into new technology. Early in the match you have to fight for survival constantly, but at the King difficulty if I survive long enough and progress enough I can eventually hit a tipping point to where I can begin to dominate and go on the offensive finally. The tipping point usually comes once I've built the Cathedral (gives +2 culture per every population point), the University (quadruples science production), and something that increases building production like a Factory. Once I have those assets I can build new offensive military units and use them to clear out all the hostiles from my lands, as well as build new defensive military units that can be positioned at strategic borders or land bridges so that I can keep enemies from getting to my cities in the first place.

That playstyle gives me a lot of satisfaction, I love starting out the game being swamped by enemy armies, defending my capital like it's the Alamo, and slowly over time I get stronger until I'm capable of repelling all invaders and securing my cities borders so that I can prosper without being surrounded every round. King difficulty is not too easy, nor too hard, and let's me play like the turtle I am.

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Dark Souls

I took a break from this game for a while but now I'm getting back into it. Some of you may remember a series I'm doing called the Dark Souls Diary. I play through a few areas of the game, beat the bosses, and then write out a new entry telling you about my favorite battles and experiences I've been having in my first playthrough of the game. In my last entry I told you of my adventures in the Demon Ruins, Lost Izalith, New Londo Ruins, and I told you that I would be entering Tomb of the Giants and beyond for the next entry. Right now I'm at the end of the Tomb and I'm preparing to fight the boss, I've heard he is called Gravelord Nito. Tonight I will fight him and see what he's like. I'm happy to be near the end of Tomb of the Giants, it's been a very dangerous and dark place. Last night I was around the boss door and all these tiny baby skeletons were surrounding me and attacking me with toxic attacks. It was terrifying, they remind me of possessed little dolls. According to the walkthroughs and wikis I've seen, I'm getting close to finishing the whole game so I'm pretty excited because I've come so far. Once I've beaten Tomb of the Giants and at least one more area I think I'll put together a new entry for the Dark Souls Diary.


 

Comments

Super Step Contributing Writer

04/10/2013 at 04:54 PM

I actually just saw a Dark Souls II gameplay trailer, or IGN interview footage, whatever. Looked pretty decent overall.

Had not really known about the series, but I'll read your Dark Souls Diary entry. I'm intrigued by a game with baby skeletons outside a boss door. Creepy.

Michael117

04/10/2013 at 06:42 PM

I just watched the Dark Souls II video that asrealasitgets posted here on Pixlbit. It looks like a lot of fun, DSII will be my most anticipated RPG by far and one of my most anticipated games in general. Dark Souls is probably my favorite RPG ever and I really love the combat, level design, and system design. The first game has been an unforgettable experience so far.

Ranger1

04/10/2013 at 08:20 PM

Far Cry 3 sounds way too chaotic for my taste, but you've probably deduced that I'm not a huge fan of sand box games by now. I'm also not into first person games that involve combat, both of which may be why I just never could get into Fallout 3. I do love me some Civilization Revolution, though. I like that game so much that I have it for both the 360 and the DS. I've spent more time with the DS version, though. There's something supremely satisfying about total global domination on the go.

Michael117

04/10/2013 at 09:20 PM

Fallout 3 has some really amazing side quests and writing but the game itself isn't very enjoyable for me, and I'm a big fan of first person games and shooters. I just don't like how Fallout 3 feels and is paced as a shooter and action game. It has one of my favorite beginnings to a game ever where you see your character from birth to highschool and you get to craft him/her and their personality and traits. I love the beginning of the game, love the sidequests and characters, but the act of playing the game itself gets really boring or even frustrating for me. Even with that said one of the games I'm most looking forward to hearing about at E3 this year would be Fallout 4. I really hope the next Fallout game is in development and we see something about it this year.

Civilization challenges me and engages my brain but it calms me and focuses me all at the same time. I don't ever feel stressed out when I play CivRev, but I feel engaged and challenged. It's such an amazing game, Sid Meier really knocked it out of the park when he designed CivRev.

Ranger1

04/10/2013 at 09:31 PM

I remember playing the first Civ game. I won once, I kept trying to get my civilization into space, but in the end, it was just so much easier to just take over the world.

Chris Yarger Community Manager

04/11/2013 at 05:59 AM

I'm glad you're closing in on the end of Dark Souls finally!

And that's kind of a bummer in regards to Far Cry 3. I really really want to play that game, but I just never got around to it yet. Since you and I have a similar taste in games though, I'm a little more hesitant now than before though.

Michael117

04/11/2013 at 11:43 AM

I'm happy to start getting back into Dark Souls, it feels like the right time. You're planning an awesome video walkthrough, I'm trying to finish the Dark Souls Diary, it gets me excited to get back into the groove of DS combat and dungeon crawling.

Far Cry 3 is really really fun, but there are a couple things that will get frustrating. The two biggest offenders are that the story isn't interesting, and the other big one is that some of the side quests seem broken or easy to break. There's lots of main quests, and various types of side quests. The side quests have animal hunting missions, pirate leader assassination missions, and then they have these fetch quests that usually reward you a lot of money ($500). Those high reward fetch quests are appealing because they're easy and you get paid a lot, but a lot of the time they get broken or the items you're suppose to find are stupid hard to see or they don't sequence properly. You don't have to do those broken quests though, you can just choose the option to abandon them from the pause menu and they will go back to where you were before you started the quest. You can always try the quests again and they may work, but they aren't essential. You can make money other ways too.

For the most part it's a fantastic game though, it's some of the most fun I've had in a shooter this generation. The guns are all great, everything looks, feels, and sounds great. The stealth is a ton of fun, running across wild animals and pirates is fun, running around the wilds is great. The skill trees are good and offer a lot of useful upgrades and new mechanics. You can use hang gliders and sail across areas of the islands, driving works well, and seeing the fire in action is awesome. Fires spread really fast and you can use them to your advantage by setting fires with fire arrows, flare gun, or straight up with the flamethrower. The flamethrower is sweet, you can go through a pirate camp and set fire to everything and watch it sweep the whole place down. It's crazy. There's a lot of fun stuff to do and crazy stuff to see in Far Cry 3.

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