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“FIVE GOLDEN RINGS”, sings the chorus


On 12/29/2013 at 03:56 PM by KnightDriver

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     It’s an appropriate day to be playing Sonic, this fifth day of Christmas, but instead I’m recapping my week. I chat about Mario & Lugi: Dream Team, Halo: Spartan Assault, Skylanders: Swap Force, Lego Star Wars, Despicable Me Minion Rush, environmental design, Jared Diamond’s criticism of video games, game conventions,  and complain about Halo 4… again.

     In Mario & Luigi: Dream Team I’m approaching the 40 hour mark. I’m high up on the snow and ice covered summit of Mt. Pajama. A new Luiginary Work has emerged that changes the screen from summer to winter, allowing platforms to rise under the pressure of water for summer and freeze in place for winter. The Massif Bros. are funny with their meat infused language using “beef” to descibe their muscles and calling M & L “cutlets”. I’ll never tire of this game until it is finished.

     I thought Halo: Spartan Assault was coming to Xbox 360 on Tuesday the 24th but it was just the Xbox One  version, the 360 version coming in January. There’s nothing else coming out for me in January, so I guess that’s ok. In the meantime, I thought I’d go back to Halo 4 and finish it. More of that below.

                                       fluffyunicorn

                                                               Fluffy Unicorn

     During Christmas, I watched my niece and nephew play Skylanders: Swap Force, Lego Star Wars the Complete Saga on iPhone, and Despicable Me Minion Rush on iPad. My nephew got many Skylanders figures for gifts and I questioned him on which ones were swappable, giants or just normal Skylanders. I love the design of the figures. They’re full of expression and very colorful. I found the presentation of the game very much like a Dreamworks or Pixar film. This game is clearly aimed at kids. My nephew got really excited when his character gained new abilities. So did I in fact. Then I watched him playing Lego Star Wars The Complete Saga on his iPhone on the couch. I helped him through one area because I know every level of that game. It looks and plays exactly like the Xbox 360 version, the only difference being the controls. Then my niece came over to the couch with her iPad and soon both of them were playing Despicable Me Minion Rush on both iPad and iPhone. I was in the middle trying to look at both screens. The game is like a lot of iOS running games. You’re on a multi-laned track and you swipe the screen with your finger to make your character jump obstacles or switch lanes.  You play for score and then unlock new abilities with your winnings. I love the minions from Despicable Me and so enjoyed watching them play it. They both got really excited over unlocking things like The Fluffy Unicorn and Mega Minion. One of these days I’ll have an iPad. It’s a great device for gaming.

              as3landscape

                                                         Assassin's Creed III

    I’ve being reading Eric Rutkow’s American Canopy: Trees, Forests and the Making of a Nation and I keep wanting to see what America looked like before the first colonies. I wish I was doing environmental art for games because I want to do a East Coast of the U.S. with the forest that existed in the 16th century. There was an aneqdote given in the book saying that a squirel could have traveled from Georgia to New England, moving over the canopy of Chestnut trees without ever once touching the ground. That in itself is something I would love to animate. Imagine a game where you travel long distances over the canopy of the trees, interacting with the birds and butterflies that live up there. What an interesting landscape that would be! I tried to think of a game that had something similar and the only one I could think of was maybe Assassin’s Creed III. It takes place in the 18th century, so it’s not settlement day-one, but it’s before the intensive logging that took place in the 19th century. I’m excited to play that game now to see how they rendered the environment.

     I finished reading Jared Diamond’s The World Until Yesterday: What Can We Learn from Traditional Societies and, among many other interesting ideas, noticed that he was fairly critical of video games in modern society suggesting that they keep kids indoors and sedentary and limit their creativity. He says kids in traditional societies, who spend nearly all their time outdoors and have to make their own toys if they want them, are more creative as a result. I think some of this criticism is unfair and the result of a man who is in his 70’s and unfamiliar with actually playing of video games (he claims in the book once that he has to ask his son to explain to him how to use the remote for his TV. That doesn't sound like someone who has any experience with video games). Some video games can be very linear and simple and allow for no creativity, but others offer wide open experiences where you can invent your own stories as in sandbox games like GTA and Elder Scrolls and others even allow for making new visuals or gameplay with creation tools like Little Big Planet and Halo's Forge. And heck, modding tools for PC games can get you employed as a designer. The possibilities for creativity with games are endless. Of course, you could just sit on your couch and perform endless QTE’s and basically do little more than watch TV, but it’s your choice. Being too sedentary is a valid criticism of games, but you don’t have to play twelve hours a day. I’m outside nearly all the time and sometimes am playing my 3DS in the park between walks. Sometimes I play inside all day long, but I usually get up and walk down the street for some grub sometime in the middle of that and it's usually just once a week. I would add that making your own games from sticks or whatnot is interesting and requires a lot of ingenuity, but it is quite limited compared to rending an entire world on a computer. I would challenge his assertion that tradition society kids are more creative than modern kids. Just look at what they do in Minecraft. Amazing!

     I got my 2014 calendar this week and started thinking about important things to write on it. I got curious about gaming conventions and found a really long list of them on the wiki page for “list of gaming conventions”. I couldn’t help but put every one of them on my calendar, even the ones I have no hope of visiting because they’re in other countries. Really, the only ones I should put on my list are the biggest ones like E3, GDC, IGF, GamesCon, Quakecon, PAX Prime and the ones I could actually get to such as: PAX East [Boston], Dragon Con [Georgia], MAGfest [Maryland], and the one that's practically in my back yard, Too Many Games [Pennsylvania]. I like thinking about ALL the cons though and will look up their web sites the weeks they happen and report on some of it here in my blog.

                     halo4

                                                                        Halo 4

     I got some console gaming in at my friend’s place on Saturday and finished the campaign of Halo 4. I really dislike the story in this game. Master Chief says at one point that he is supposed to protect Cortana and that he won’t let her sacrifice herself, but I recall that he was ordered by Capt. Keyes in the first game to keep her out of the hands of the Covenant, not to “protect” her exactly. Also, Master Chief’s refusal to follow Del Rio’s order to retreat from the Didact and Commander Laskey’s aid just rubs me the wrong way. A Spartan’s first priority would be to follow orders. Yes they’re trained to think for themselves in the field and adapt to new situations but orders are orders. You could say MC has added authority as the savior of Earth and thus feels he can make his own orders, but Del Rio doesn’t treat him with any respect unlike in Halo 3 where MC had almost equal authority to the UNSC commanders. Del Rio calls him an “aging” Spartan with a rampant AI. Dude. I saved frickin' Earth. Give some respect. Everything about this game seems to suggest an attempt to retire MC and turn the focus on more “human” characters like Commander Laskey and Spartan IV Sarah Palmer. Seriously, I’m really miffed at these attempts to remove MC and Cortana. There’s no reason for it. Did Indiana Jones remove Indy? Did Star Wars remove Vader? Halo IS MC, without him it’s just another space opera. You don’t need to age him or keep any kind of rational timeline. It’s just a story. It can go anywhere. No one really cares about continuity or realism. Keep the central characters. It’s what makes it Halo.

   Oh yea, and why is Cortana so realistically naked? It's titilating at first but after a while it gets really annoying and just seems gratuitous and strange. AIs in the Halo universe can choose their own holographic image. Why does Cortana choose a naked female? Others have chosen a cowboy, a woman in Grecian robes, or even a black box. Why a naked female with no anatomical details covered in electronic energy? I don't get it. Emotional vulnerability? The need to keep MC interested so he continues to protect her? What? It's never explained. I just feel exploited by this visual choice that has little to do with the story. Enough all ready!

    Oh yea, and reloads. WAY TOO MANY! Is this a run-and-gun game or a cover-based game like COD? I think 343 is trying to make it more like COD. Lead the way, don’t follow. That’s what Bungie did. Halo’s gunplay has gone totally to precision headshot fest instead of the bullet hell style it always was. Me don’t like! Wah!

     Finally I got The Wolf Among Us Episode One for free on Xbox Live’s week of Christmas sale on Saturday. Maybe I’ll play it sometime.


 

Comments

C.S.3590SquadLeader

12/29/2013 at 05:11 PM

Reading recent articles that slam videogames gets me thinking about when just about the same kind of articles were written about comic books when they were gaining a lot of mainstream attention. There can be a few valid points found in some of arguments that are made, but it tends to boil down to 'Everything was much simpler before this new thing came about, so we should all hate it', and I just find it annoying.

I had a blast with Mario & Luigi: Dream Team, and I hope that this isn't the only game the Masif Bros appear in.

KnightDriver

12/29/2013 at 11:36 PM

Jared Diamond doesn't explicitly attack video games but he suggests it contributes to kids being sendentary and that it's a factor in some of them getting diabeties. I mean, he has a point. My brother-in-law carefully monitors how much his kids play video games and tries to have them do other things too like Cub Scouts, Martial Arts and Dance classes so they don't sit in front of the TV all the time. I think you have to look at the adicitive quallity of some games and not get too caught up in it all or let your kids, if you have some - I don't, get too carried away. I must have a natural immunity to it though because I usually stop a game that becomes too much of a adiction for me.

Super Step Contributing Writer

12/29/2013 at 05:11 PM

I love the humor in Mario RPGs, it's one of the reasons those are some of the only RPGs I can tolerate. Those meat-referencing brothers sound funny. Their description reminds me of the moustached Barnaby brothers riding a two-person unicycle in that one Family Guy episode. 

It's great how kids can get you excited for things, just by being excited themselves. My mom loves downloading games on her iPad. One is called Clumsy Ninja or something, which to me looked like she was using it as a virtual replacement for those grandkids my brother and I haven't given her that she keeps asking about. Another game she has, she said she downloaded to tach herself and her students coding. It's this game where you have to plan out the movements of this ball-creature thing by using arrows or functions that use three arrows to ensure they get to the end of the level safely. Basically, it's a bunch of logic puzzles meant to get you into the mindset of someone coding commands.

Speaking of which, I'd have to agree with you about kids today being plenty creative. I edited and uploaded this video. Excuse the awkward transition from quiet to sound by the way, I asked her if I should mute the close-up she wanted, since that was the only video file with a close-up I found that she had, and she said no. I'd have shot things differently, had I been there to do any of the camera stuff, but I digress. Anyway, the video is of one of my mom's kid's who built a LEGO robot that can solve a Rubik's cube. It's based on the idea of another Youtuber, but the kid made it himself. Of course, I'm not disagreeing at all with the author about getting outside more, exercising, socializing, yadda yadda, that's all certainly important. But anyone who has that unbalanced an approach is more than likely incorrect in his over-reaching assertions, according to my knowledge and experience. Plus, most of the jobs in modern (so I guess less traditional) societies will contine to be in technology, I think, so unless he's saying these kids actually want to live in a traditional society, it's a good idea to let kids use the computer, I think. Heck, even though I'm not creative with my games, I think there are definitely useful traits of RPGs that can be used to teach life management or math skills. And just think how cool it would be to go to school, and instead of having banana stickers or monkeys representing your acheivements, having or being an RPG character that levels up when you make good grades, or do good deeds. 

The nature book sounds interesting as well. I think I've heard that thing about the canopies before, but I don't know from where. A game that takes place in a world up in the trees would be cool, I think. I need to start reading more non-fiction like you are, though. For Christmas, I got my dad George Washington: The Crossing and Killing Jesus, but the one I couldn't find anywhere, Ghosts of Manhattan, sounded like something I'd like to read. 

As for gaming conventions, I've only ever been to SGC 2013, and only then because a friend had a free ticket, but it was a blast! I see that Twitter has changed the handle to SGC 2014, and depending on who will be there, I may want to go again. Which reminds me, I STILL have not dry-set those signatures on my Batman shirt. Hmm.

KnightDriver

12/29/2013 at 11:48 PM

I think it's the humor that made me fall for the Mario & Lugi games. It's also the battle system where it's turn-based but you have timed button presses to do as well.

I heard that one of the reasons Microsoft went into gaming with the Xbox was to get kids interested in computers and raise up a new crop of programmers to replace all those guys who started at the beginning of the company and who are now starting to retire. Lots of programmers started out their interest in computers through games and Microsoft knows that.

I just thought of a game that has canopies. Donkey Kong Country. Sometimes you hop from tree top to tree top.

I really want to go to conventions but they always cost something and that always keeps me away. I would love to go to PAX East in Boston and then hit Funspot just a few hours away in New Hampshire. One day.

Super Step Contributing Writer

12/30/2013 at 02:01 AM

I love the Mario RPGs for the same reasons as well. Those timed-presses added in with the combat make it a lot more tolerable and enjoyable for an action-game type like myself. 

I'm interested in that theory about Microsoft. Although, I don't think they needed to enter the console marketplace to acheive that goal, necessarily, but hey, more power to them. I still don't think I'll buy an XBONE, but I do like playing games on my Windows laptop, so whatever. And maybe once I bite the bullet and download Windows 8.1, the OS will be better, too. 

And yeah, DKC has canopies, but that's a limited side scroller, I was thinking something more epic in scope. Like a Squirrel Skyrim where you never touch the ground.

And yeah, I don't know what ticket prices are like, since I got in for free, but if they're too steep, I'll have to stay at home myself. 

KnightDriver

12/30/2013 at 03:02 AM

That's the next thing I want to get into, Mario RPG and Paper Mario.

Squirrel Skyrim! Oh yes! That's what I'm thinking of too. 

Cary Woodham

12/29/2013 at 05:52 PM

Yeah I'm glad I got an iPad.  I've been able to review a lot of games on it.

KnightDriver

12/29/2013 at 11:49 PM

Tablets are super cool and they're great for kids. My neice has one in a pink cover and she carries it everywhere.

jgusw

12/29/2013 at 05:56 PM

I'll have to look into gettting Mario & Luigi: Dream Team.  

KnightDriver

12/29/2013 at 11:51 PM

I'm loving it. It's great.

massifbros

daftman

12/29/2013 at 09:08 PM

Mario & Luigi: Dream is one of the many 3DS games I need to get. I've played and loved all the other Mario & Luigi games, so I sure don't want to miss out on this one.

I never played the original Halo and only a little of the second one, so I had no idea what was going on in Halo 3 and didn't really care too much with Halo 4. I really enjoyed that game though. My wife and I played the multiplayer for a long time after finishing the campaign. I would be excited for Halo 5 but I don't anticipate having an Xbox One for a long time, if ever, so that curbs my enthusiasm quite a bit. But yeah, Cortana has gotten progressively more naked with every game. A very strange choice on her part *rolls eyes*

KnightDriver

12/30/2013 at 12:02 AM

I still have to play Bowser's Inside Story. I bought it this year, so I'm ready to go.

As graphics get better and better the nakedness in games is going to really stand out. I don't know if it's just me being prudish or what, but staring at a pretty much naked body for hours on end, like in Halo 4, just starts to annoy me after a while. "I'm trying to play a game, stop distracting me!" I hear myself saying. If I was playing with a woman in the room, I'd feel like I had to appologize for the game since it is clearly tying to make a cheap grab for the attention of male gamers. I mean, how nerdy and pathetic would I look shooting things and staring at a naked female for hours on end.

avidacridjam

12/31/2013 at 10:10 PM

I have no idea what's going on in the stories of the Halo franchise so Cortana's "nude" image is the least of my problems. 

KnightDriver

01/01/2014 at 01:34 AM

The first game was like an action movie. Simple and direct. Now it's all this lore and history, political conflict, and even... relationships... yuk! It's more bloated than this Sonic float at the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade.

sonicfloat

BrokenH

12/31/2013 at 10:32 PM

I will not really argue with Cortana's "hawt design" but I agree sometimes the creators of good stories over complicate things and take their yarns to places that are less appealing. MC and Cortana are a very important part of Halo lore. It's difficult to imagine the series without them or without hints alluding to upgraded versions of them in the future. I kind of like the "harsh reality" of AIs becoming more erratic and unstable over time but there could be a whole game focused around finding a solution for that problem. 

KnightDriver

01/01/2014 at 01:40 AM

Yea, Bungie created two problems in their Halo bible. One: the Spartan Program's abduction of children for the Spartan II's like Master Chief; Two: AI rampancy. The last Karen Traviss book was obsessed with the first issue and Halo 4 the second. Getting hung up on this stuff is ruining the series. Stop worrying about MC's psychology and solve the rampancy problem. It's not that hard. You can do anything in a story. Just fix this stuff and get back to the business of ass kicking.

NSonic79

01/10/2014 at 01:15 PM

Oh you just had to touch on Halo 4 didn't you *rubs hands with glee*

I believe halo 4 was trying to go for the growing "relationship' aspect between MC and Cortana that it got to that point between them where MC's orders to keep Cortana from falling into the hands of the covenant start to get personal to just simply protect Cortana given all that they've gone thru in the original trilogy. I'd like to think of things from the cheif's persective: everyone he's ever known, been close to and places he's seen are now all gone. He knows not of the rest of the Spartan II's, Avery's dead, Reach being slagged, both Keyes's gone and Halsey now a war criminal. All he has left now is Cortana. If I were the cheif I'd not want to let Cortana go. AI or no she's all he has left. It helps to show how their "relationship" has change from simply originally being a piece of software to an actual "partner" in all that they did together. AI or no, and advanced super solider or no, he can't ignore the fact of all that's happen between them. Plus it does help that Halsey (the brain based for Cortana) did have a certain affection for the Chief.

For me seeing the MC stand up to Del Rio made perfect sense. The Didact was a big enough of a threat, more than the covenant even, and Del Rio was too much of a petty beuricract (sorry can't spell right) to see that threat. Remember this was the guy who was dumb enough to think that the Infinity could handle the gravity well of the shield world, he thought the ship's AA guns could protect the first recon team on the surface only for them to get caught under Promethean fire, he didn't consider performing standard recon on a mission that caused the Chief to improvise when a pelican got shot down by cannon fire. Compared to Admiral Hood and Captain Keyes, Del Rio had no business commanding the Infinitiy. That alone is enough for the Cheif to pull rank and do what was best, something that Laskey could see when he offered the Cheif that pelican to finish his mission to protect earth. That eventually became the right call when Laskey was placed under the command of the Infinity when earth learned of all that happened on the shield world. And this was even before reading about the histories of Del Rio and Laskey (which further fleshes out the men they are and the stark differences on why they did what they did)

As for Cortana looking more realisticly naked: I just chalked that up to the constant push for Cortana to look more "realisitic" in every different version of Halo. Every version of her looked better and better over time. I just chalk up to her "not wearing clothes" to the fact that she was a speically made smart AI with no thought of clothes at first. Sure the others from the books and Serena from halo wars had clothes but I wouldn't be surprised it was an afterthought when smart AI's becaome more preveant in a sense.

I could go on more about Halo 4 but I'm not sure I should go that crazed. After all it's only a game :)

KnightDriver

01/10/2014 at 03:25 PM

First of all, you should always go on more on this subject and especially because it's a game. This is the place to do it.

So, all you said makes a whole lot of sense.

I guess I'm annoyed at the humanization of MC in this game. He's being brung down to an average joe level and he's supposed to be a super hero. Feelings? Bah! Having to deal with burocracy? Nonsense!

I just can't stand modern media's insistance on rationality and realism lately. Who cares what MC thinks and feels. He's an empty shell for us to put our own personality into when we play the game.

I resent the suggestion in this game that he's some sociopathic, damaged individual whose only pal is a virtual AI naked chick. What are they trying to say about gamers? That we're like that?

As games start to merge with mainstream media, I hear the forces of mainstream media calling gamers introverted nerds and then adding love stories and real life problems to appeal to the boring masses - everything becoming a TV show. This influence was embodied in the presence of Joel McHale at the VGX Awards who did nothing but insult game designers and act like all this gaming stuff was way beneath his interest.

I get everything you're saying and I think your right on. It all makes sense but I'm still not happy about it. I figure out why after some more thought. Right now I'm conflicted between the facts you laid out and my feelings on the thing. More later.

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