Archive for the “Gaming” Category

My posts about or involving gaming

So I was going to take an hour break or so from work and start playing Batman: Arkham Asylum for PC before bed. Came across a few problems that makes me think this game might not have been worth buying at all.

Click to continue reading

Comments 1 Comment »

When I start writing twitter post after twitter post, and am about to write a few more, I realize perhaps the subject in question is better suited to my blog. Between Steam’s post-Thanksgiving sale and their Christmas Sale (going on until January 3rd), I have bought a ton of games, and only spent about $105.

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

I suppose, there being a new TF2 update, I should post a little about it. I would be playing it right now but my computer can’t connect to VALVe’s inventory servers, which means no weapon switching and possibly no weapons drops at all.

I got on a little last night, I was able to see my inventory and the crafting page, though I wasn’t so brave as to try crafting while the inventory servers were overloaded. I played 1-2 hours and got 20+ items, including the Eyelander (sword), Targe (shield), and the Direct Hit (launcher with faster rockets). I’m really glad they dropped all three, as these were the three items I was most anxious to test.

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

Steam is a cool community/online gaming middleman/distribution platform for the PC. It allows you to download games to as many PCs as you want, but you have to be logged in to play them. It completely erases the need for installation discs. As someone with a couple boxes of computer discs, it’s a great boon.

Two things Steam should do though, to make their service that much better:

1) Backup game saves and sync them between all of a user’s computers.

2) Remove the damn age-verification screens in their app if I’m logged in.

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

A little over 2 weeks ago, I posted an article called, “But…I’m a PC Gamer,” about Infinity Ward’s direct porting of Modern Warfare 2 to PC, and addressing people claiming this could mean the death of PC games.

Generally, certain advanced options are given to PC games, such as use of an in-game command console and the ability to host servers for multiplayer games. On the PS3 and Xbox 360, online multiplayer games are usually populated using an automated matchmaking system.

I stressed that being able to choose what servers I play on is very important to me:

In server-hosted online games, any group can create a static server, for which they set the rules. They can kick off and ban cheaters and troublemakers, they can use experimental maps or weapons, or even ensure the game is as “vanilla” as possible. These benefits are what make online gaming fun for me.

However, I reasoned that match-made games are okay for console gaming, and I’ve played Uncharted 2 online without any problems, so matchmaking instead of hosted servers might not be so bad.

Then I saw this post by Les on Stupid Evil Bastard, entitled ‘Infinity Ward has fucked over “Call of Duty” fans who play on the PC.’ Guess where he falls on the issue? Unlike me, Les has actually played Modern Warfare 2 on PC, here’s what he said about the experience:

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

Hey everyone! I’m working on some blog posts at the moment, but thought now would be a good time to throw out some random personal updates.

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

The other day, Attack of the Show’s segment “The Loop” asked the question, “Is PC gaming dead?” It’s a very troubling question for me, I am a PC gamer. There are a lot of different issues involved, but I’m going to try and tackle a lot of them in this article. (SPOILER!!!–PC Games RULE!!!)

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

I haven’t talked about Steam, the amazing service/store for PC games in a while, and without looking at my archives none of the previous articles I’ve written may have survived the latest redesign.

So for those that don’t know, or do know but just love hearing about it, Steam is a program that you install to your computer. It is the brainchild of Valve Corporation, the creators of the Half Life franchise and the Left 4 Dead (soon to be) franchise. I’m a big fan of their games, and am awaiting the release of Half Life, Episode 3 with baited breath.

So what’s so great about Steam?

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

Uncharted_2_thumbI beat Uncharted 2 yesterday, here are a few notes (mostly comparing/contrasting with the first Uncharted game):

This game kicks ass. I was a little suspicious of some of the scenes I’d seen in trailers. Running on a train, for instance, while a helicopter is firing at you looked cool but I worried in the game it would be overwhelming and too difficult. For my money, they balanced it perfectly and it was great fun.

Click to continue reading

Comments 1 Comment »

Nokia_n900

What you see before you is the Nokia N900 portable internet device and phone. Looks similar to the Nokia N810 internet tablet, but pictures are deceiving. The N900 is much smaller, about the size of my HTC Touch Pro.

The N900 has the same processor as the iPhone, a comparable graphics processor (slightly less powerful, I think), more RAM, 32GB internal memory and a microSDHC slot (expandable up to 16GB). It has a full 3.5″ jack for audio and video, it has an accelerometer, and it has a ridiculous capacity for multitasking. By “ridiculous,” I mean you have 4 separate desktops, you can have a handful of apps running, have multiple web pages open, be streaming music, etc. It also has Flash 9.4 support. Yeah, get ready for a lot more Flash capable phones in the future, it’s a deal-maker.

It’s battery life is rated for a ‘full day’ of of streaming music, surfing the net, watching movies, etc–what they call ‘full use’. The term ‘full day’ can be misleading, it usually means a full work day. People are reporting 12-13 hours with ‘full use’–using internet, GPS, and watching movies. Hey, with laptops ‘full day’ only means 8 hours.

A bigger selling point for the N900 is Maemo, Nokia’s open source mobile OS. Android is a cell-phone (and tablet?) OS based on Linux that may some day be expanded to work on netbooks and desktop PCs. Maemo is a tablet/cell phone OS built on Linux, and it’s essentially desktop Linux scaled down to work with lower resolutions and less powerful hardware. Both are open source, but Maemo is the more open of the two, and I’m told much easier to port to. I’ve never tried Android, though I’m anxious to. I have used Maemo (not version 5), and found it very satisfying. Here is a demo video of Maemo 5:

(PSST–The device used to demo Maemo 5 in that video is the N900) There’s a video of the N900 actually in use way down at the bottom of this post.

Click to continue reading

Comments No Comments »

Bad Behavior has blocked 60 access attempts in the last 7 days.