UFO 50 is a game many years in the making. It is an indy game- arguably THE indy game- because it's, well, 50 games. 50 whole-a$$ games, in one game.
The conceit is it's the library of a made-up 80's console, so it's 8-bit style. This thread will be about my journey through this library, hopefully for your entertainment but also so that I can keep track of what I'm doing so I know which games to go back to.
'Cause... it's 50 games! And I won't like most of them because it's deliberately calling back 80's lo-fi and jank. Now, for context, I did have a Coleco Vision and an NES as a kid and it was this era of gaming that made me fall in love with the hobby but I was happy to leave 8-bit behind and never really wanted to go back. But the premise and promise of UFO 50 are too fascinating to pass by. Plus I have nothing else I really wanna play now and it's a good deal: $22.50 USD for 50 games.
The meta-game part is pretty much non-existent- you literally just open the game in Steam like any other and you have a menu of 50 games, that's it, that's the whole thing. Default sort is "chronological"- which means when the games were made in the fake history of this fake console. I'm going to go in that order, check out each one in turn, play them for however long I happen to have in each gaming session (which with my schedule can be literally any amount of time from 10 minutes in between work/chores or a whole rainy day of nothing else to do).
The conceit is it's the library of a made-up 80's console, so it's 8-bit style. This thread will be about my journey through this library, hopefully for your entertainment but also so that I can keep track of what I'm doing so I know which games to go back to.
'Cause... it's 50 games! And I won't like most of them because it's deliberately calling back 80's lo-fi and jank. Now, for context, I did have a Coleco Vision and an NES as a kid and it was this era of gaming that made me fall in love with the hobby but I was happy to leave 8-bit behind and never really wanted to go back. But the premise and promise of UFO 50 are too fascinating to pass by. Plus I have nothing else I really wanna play now and it's a good deal: $22.50 USD for 50 games.
The meta-game part is pretty much non-existent- you literally just open the game in Steam like any other and you have a menu of 50 games, that's it, that's the whole thing. Default sort is "chronological"- which means when the games were made in the fake history of this fake console. I'm going to go in that order, check out each one in turn, play them for however long I happen to have in each gaming session (which with my schedule can be literally any amount of time from 10 minutes in between work/chores or a whole rainy day of nothing else to do).