What are you currently playing?

Dalisclock

Making lemons combustible again
Legacy
Escapist +
Feb 9, 2008
11,244
7,023
118
A Barrel In the Marketplace
Country
Eagleland
Gender
Male
The story was kind of obtuse, and I'll admit I don't entirely get it. Something about nihilism, but I'm not really sure what the point of playing through the game 3 times was, other than to maximize asset reuse. The characters other than 9S were uniformly flat. I did end up doing most of the side-quests and did enjoy some of them, most were busywork though.
There's a lot of existenalist tropes to be sure, with a heavy anime filter. The primary theme is: If you were religious and found out God is dead(and had been dead for a long time), what do you do now? Most of the game seems to be dedicated to exploring this, even if it's often silly(Robots run an amusement park...for themselves I guess?).
 
  • Like
Reactions: Drathnoxis

Worgen

Follower of the Glorious Sun Butt.
Legacy
Apr 1, 2009
14,471
3,426
118
Gender
Whatever, just wash your hands.
I liked crying sun, but I don't really feel like doing another run since, unlike most roguelike, it has a pretty strong focus on story and replaying it after finishing the story once feel pointless. It did have a pretty satisfying conclusion.
Yeah, I can totally see that being the case.
 
  • Like
Reactions: meiam

Piscian

Elite Member
Apr 28, 2020
1,679
1,716
118
Country
United States
Holy shit. Ive been playing Ghosts of Tsushima for like a week now and Ive only finished like two of the main quests. Literally sitting here on a Friday night just exploring the island, not even playing the story. Im playing PS5 OLED, HDR 77" and this is honest to god one of the prettiest games Ive ever played. Haven't had this much fun just existing in a game since Far Cry 1.
 

FakeSympathy

Elite Member
Legacy
Jun 8, 2015
3,081
2,790
118
Country
US
With the recent sales, I got MK11 Ultimate for $8.97.

I have not played fighting games in years. I always found them to be complex, hard to master, and I found the idea of two characters beating the crap out of each other appealing. I'd much rather go out exploring in a adventure games.

But MK11, has awakened something in me. The rush I get when I pull off complex combs, the x-ray showing the impact of my attacks (which thankfully was toned down compared to MK9 which was the last MK game I played. It got old), and the absolutely bonker story that complements the hyper violence.

I am still not that good at this game, but it might be the game to help me get more into the genre
 

Johnny Novgorod

Bebop Man
Legacy
Feb 9, 2012
18,520
3,041
118
Well I finished Hollow Knight, again. Three full >100% playthroughs in four years and a Platinum trophy and I still couldn't tell you what the story is about. I mean obviously it's your standard issue From Software reboot-a-dying-world hodgepodge, rife with sadness and madness and portent, but I couldn't tell you what anything stands for. There's a Pale King and a White Lady, you're The Knight but not The Hollow Knight, you fight the memories of the dreams of the visions of the dead and there are wyrms and gods and vessels and voids and everything's infected with too much light or too much fungus or both.

Good game but the lore is a typical case of "we'll let some nerd figure out the canon and go with it".
 

Absent

And twice is the only way to live.
Jan 25, 2023
1,594
1,552
118
Country
Switzerland
Gender
The boring one
🙄

Many years ago, I used to be good at Into the Breach.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Dalisclock

Dalisclock

Making lemons combustible again
Legacy
Escapist +
Feb 9, 2008
11,244
7,023
118
A Barrel In the Marketplace
Country
Eagleland
Gender
Male
If you are one of the many that venerate Silent Hill 2, you owe it to yourself to play Signalis. Or if you just like classic survival horror in general.
I know Castle Super Beast were talking about how it's very much like Silent Hill and doesn't try to hide it
 

Worgen

Follower of the Glorious Sun Butt.
Legacy
Apr 1, 2009
14,471
3,426
118
Gender
Whatever, just wash your hands.
Hrot finally fully launched so I finished up the campaign. A very cool old school style fps game, the final episode holds up the quality of the first 2.
 

Chimpzy

Simian Abomination
Legacy
Escapist +
Apr 3, 2020
12,252
8,517
118
I know Castle Super Beast were talking about how it's very much like Silent Hill and doesn't try to hide it
Oh yeah, it totally wears its inspirations on its sleeve. But that's ok, because it gets it right, tho of course explaining why goes into obvious spoiler territory.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Dalisclock

Piscian

Elite Member
Apr 28, 2020
1,679
1,716
118
Country
United States
If you are one of the many that venerate Silent Hill 2, you owe it to yourself to play Signalis. Or if you just like classic survival horror in general.
Appears to be on sale right now too. I'll check it out.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Dalisclock

Dalisclock

Making lemons combustible again
Legacy
Escapist +
Feb 9, 2008
11,244
7,023
118
A Barrel In the Marketplace
Country
Eagleland
Gender
Male
Oh yeah, it totally wears its inspirations on its sleeve. But that's ok, because it gets it right, tho of course explaining why goes into obvious spoiler territory.
It looks good no doubt. I look forward to giving it a go at some point.

*Looks at his backlog with existential dread*
 

hanselthecaretaker

My flask is half full
Legacy
Nov 18, 2010
8,738
5,905
118
Well I finished Hollow Knight, again. Three full >100% playthroughs in four years and a Platinum trophy and I still couldn't tell you what the story is about. I mean obviously it's your standard issue From Software reboot-a-dying-world hodgepodge, rife with sadness and madness and portent, but I couldn't tell you what anything stands for. There's a Pale King and a White Lady, you're The Knight but not The Hollow Knight, you fight the memories of the dreams of the visions of the dead and there are wyrms and gods and vessels and voids and everything's infected with too much light or too much fungus or both.

Good game but the lore is a typical case of "we'll let some nerd figure out the canon and go with it".
That’s not to say devs didn’t have it figured out originally though either. Lore is kinda meant to be tough to figure out by design (but also a byproduct of budget and dev time saves…except maybe for Silksong lol). It’s in the background and has to be discovered, yet there is also understandably only so much time for the player.

On one hand it’s like yeah, who has time to dig for all this stuff besides the most obsessive, but on the other, imagine just how long a game would be if lore was part of the narrative. Would most people even have the attention span let alone patience? Doubtful!
 
  • Like
Reactions: NerfedFalcon

Johnny Novgorod

Bebop Man
Legacy
Feb 9, 2012
18,520
3,041
118
That’s not to say devs didn’t have it figured out originally though either. Lore is kinda meant to be tough to figure out by design (but also a byproduct of budget and dev time saves…except maybe for Silksong lol). It’s in the background and has to be discovered, yet there is also understandably only so much time for the player.

On one hand it’s like yeah, who has time to dig for all this stuff besides the most obsessive, but on the other, imagine just how long a game would be if lore was part of the narrative. Would most people even have the attention span let alone patience? Doubtful!
There is lore in the background, and then there is lore in the background of the background, written in purple prose, fed through a grinder and shot into tiny item box descriptions and one-sided conversations between my dude and wilfully obtuse, half-crazed NPCs. Also it doesn't help that characters, places and events are all referred to by incredibly broad epithets, that the enduring ambiguity of anything strips everything of inherent value, and that there rarely is a direct relation between what you're told to do (if you're so lucky), what you actually do, and the results of what you do.

I read Moby Dick recently without prompt and for no reason, and I don't want that to become my "I invented the piano key necktie" card but believe me when I say I have infinite patience for long, rambling, reflective, inscrutable stories.

But at the end of the day, games like these, you're just an anonymous chosen one that has to pick every item, unlock every door, kill every thing and then select an ending cutscene. Anything that seeps through those cracks is there to condiment the experience and elevate it from something mundane to generically chivalrous. At least that's the case with most RPGs, and definitely every From Software and Soulslike. They're mood pieces. What I don't get immediately from the act of playing alone doesn't really matter.
 

sXeth

Elite Member
Legacy
Nov 15, 2012
3,301
675
118
There is lore in the background, and then there is lore in the background of the background, written in purple prose, fed through a grinder and shot into tiny item box descriptions and one-sided conversations between my dude and wilfully obtuse, half-crazed NPCs. Also it doesn't help that characters, places and events are all referred to by incredibly broad epithets, that the enduring ambiguity of anything strips everything of inherent value, and that there rarely is a direct relation between what you're told to do (if you're so lucky), what you actually do, and the results of what you do.

I read Moby Dick recently without prompt and for no reason, and I don't want that to become my "I invented the piano key necktie" card but believe me when I say I have infinite patience for long, rambling, reflective, inscrutable stories.

But at the end of the day, games like these, you're just an anonymous chosen one that has to pick every item, unlock every door, kill every thing and then select an ending cutscene. Anything that seeps through those cracks is there to condiment the experience and elevate it from something mundane to generically chivalrous. At least that's the case with most RPGs, and definitely every From Software and Soulslike. They're mood pieces. What I don't get immediately from the act of playing alone doesn't really matter.
Its prettymuch how it goes. The game (or in my broader direct experience, neverwinter nights server) takes place in X place which is generally moderate at best in size.

Then you basically a make a mad libs sheet for what every other place in the world is. ________ is a nation of (class/profession) with a theme of (element or abstract concept) . their colours are _______ and _______, and their creest is a (plant) and (animal or monster). Run some RNG through it and cool, you now have a fantasy RPGs worth of kingdoms and religions. (hell you can literally shove the "nations" actually ingame in Elden Ring into this format, Caelid is a nation of warriors with a theme of rot, their colours are red and their crest is (a bull IIRC). Which distinguishes them from the yellow lightning knights or the blue mage people.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Johnny Novgorod

Drathnoxis

Became a mass murderer for your sake
Legacy
Sep 23, 2010
5,468
1,916
118
Just off-screen
Country
Canada
Gender
Male
If you are one of the many that venerate Silent Hill 2, you owe it to yourself to play Signalis. Or if you just like classic survival horror in general.
The inventory limit is just abysmal, though. Even early Resident Evil games gave you 8 slots (except for OG Chris), and that's before you find the side pack. Because apparently the height of horror is running back and forth across the map every time you search a new room to unload your inventory.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BrawlMan

BrawlMan

Lover of beat'em ups.
Legacy
Mar 10, 2016
26,942
11,286
118
Detroit, Michigan
Country
United States of America
Gender
Male
The inventory limit is just abysmal, though. Even early Resident Evil games gave you 8 slots (except for OG Chris), and that's before you find the side pack. Because apparently the height of horror is running back and forth across the map every time you search a new room to unload your inventory.
It's the only thing holding me back from getting this game. The inventory limit is fucking stupid, even by survival horror standards.