Also during Dave & Buster's night, we played the new
Elevator Action game. Why they turned it into a rail shooter, I'll never know, but it's decent fun. It definitely has some cheap spots, and enemies can hit you from off screen. We did it complete the game. It just kind of ends.
Before that we played the
World's Largest Pac-Man Arcade Game (w/ competitive co-op),
Galaga Assault, and
Space Invaders Frenzy! Pac-Man and Space Invaders are large as fuck! I forgot to take pictures sadly, but just type them in to YT or Google, you will find something.
I didn't realize there was a new version of Elevator Action. To be fair, the last one I played in an arcade was decades ago and I haven't been to a Dave and Busters in years. Hope you and your brother had fun.
Gotten some more time into Expeditions: Rome. I think I'm finally getting used to this games evolution on the system set in place by previous games. I'm in Asia Minor(Present Day Turkey) "liberating" the provinces for Rome so I can relieve my besieged allies further in. Since my legion is still fairly understrength and relatively weak, I can just march over there and break the siege but rather have to build up my forces by taking control of key provinces on the way there as well as statragic resources like mines and farms, which allow me to upgrade my camp and thus get better equipment and bonuses and such.
It's a pretty good idea for a core loop, along with legion battles and tactical missions. Notably one string of missions involves deposing the leader of the province, and this can be done by just going up and attacking him, but since he's hanging out in the middle of a temple complex, doing so is really bad form and pisses a lot of people off, so there are sneakier, more indirect ways to remove him without causing a massive scene. The game does give you dialogue options where you can use your authority as Legate(head of the legion) to consficate merchants goods and just try to take what you want by force, but I'm trying to avoid just getting into fights for no reason(since injuries can take a long time to heal and people are out of action until they do), and also I suspect doing that too often will cut off opportunities and questlines in the future.
Two things are stuck in my mind so far;
-I'm in charge of a legion but my characters I take into battle are pretty much all using Scavenged Equipment found or taken from Corpses. I've found schematic for better equipment and crafting materials but can't use any of it yet because I don't have an armory or a workshop in my camp and I can't build either of those yet until I can conquer more mines and tanneries and shit, which are currently in enemy territory. And I get that it's to push you into conquering more to upgrade, but the fact legionaries are subsisting off shit I've pulled off corpses and found in chests just feels fucking off to me. Rome wasn't at the peak of it's power at this point but it was damn well on it's way to conquering the Mediterranean and was a professional army by any means, so why am I equipping myself like a group of ragtag guerillas?
-The values Dissounce and associate Roleplaying is interesting and sometimes uncomfortable. So you don't seem to get paid in the game, all the money you get either comes from finding money, winning battles and apparently capturing money, getting it from quests and random encounters, or buying/selling. So there's only 4 resources you can buy or sell at markets: Medicine, Food, Denarii(Money) and Slaves. Yes, you get to play slave trader, and on one hand, it feels icky, but on the other, the historian in me knows why it's here, because Rome(and many other ancient societies) had slavery as a common thing and not talking about it would feel wierd and disingenuous to the time period. Hell, one of your starting party members is a slave to the PC(though very well treated and apparently is quite happy being a slave to a rich family) and the other is a former Gladiator who won his freedom in the Arena.
And generally the issue is just kinda there and you need slaves to capture(or presumably work) mines and farms you capture to upgrade your camp, plus you get slaves from won battles and some missions on the map. So you can't not engage with it and it makes the whole thing feel rather weird and kinda alien in a way and I know that's historically accurate but damn if it feels a different to have to engage with it instead of just being aware of it as part of history. It's one thing when it's Roman Slavery 2000 years ago, it's another when you're taking slaves as a Roman Commander in the present day of the 70 BCE setting. Slavery is an odious idea/practice and yet it was one so much of our history is built on.
Then again, in general the fact that everyone has these distinctly Ancient values which make perfect sense but feel wierd at times. Like the aforementioned use of the Legion to take people's shit just because you need it, something a lot of games gloss over, or the fact your characters treat Asia Minor as rightfully Roman, whereas the local Greeks clearly do not see it that way. As much as it's framed as "Liberating" Asia Minor from the Greek general who is opposing you in the area, it's clear they were there first, or at least, they've been there for the past couple centuries and you're the invader here to a lot of them. There's also such things as one particular encounter where you can run across a Woman being kidnapped by a man on horseback, being chased by a group trying to get the woman back. If you stop them, it's explained the young man kinapped her because he didn't want to pay the dowry for her and her father was "selling her", whereas the father argues that "He can't afford to take care of her if he can't afford the price of the dowry" and while you can pay the dowry if you have the money and chose to, if you try intervening on either side with force, both sides will be pissed at you for interfering with the courtship and family business and.....it feels wierd by modern standards, or at least, Western Modern standards. Like this is a very different culture and I don't know what the "right" action is supposed to be. Which I think is one of the things I find interesting how there's rarely a "good" or "evil" choice in any of these and it's just picking what you think is the best way to go.