Essence_of_Meh
@Essence_of_Meh@kayb.ee
- Comment on Suggest me some games overlooked on PS3 platform (±emulation) 9 months ago:
No problem, hope you have fun with it!
- Comment on Suggest me some games overlooked on PS3 platform (±emulation) 9 months ago:
This ended up way more rambly than intended but hopefully will be of some help. I might clean things up a bit if I have some time later.
Drakengard
First game is a bad Dynasty Warriors clone and can be a really rough experience.
It has very repetitive gameplay and pretty much requires the use of a guide if you want to get the true ending due to things like "get to this already cleared part of the map at this specific time" if I recall correctly. Final boss is... an experience.::: spoiler Minor mechanical spoiler for the final boss
It's a rhythm battle with no checkpoints.
:::It has a great story (with ending E being a direct connection to Nier Gestalt/Replicant), though depending on how resistant you are to the monotony and jank, getting there might be a challenge. There are some absolutely bonkers ideas here, beyond anything you'll find in later games and that's honestly the biggest draw for this title.
Finally there's music. Oh boy, the music. It sounds like a cacophony of a madman and not in an enjoyable way. Don't expect anything like Nier OSTs.
All in all, don't feel bad about switching to/going with an LP - this text one by The Dark Id is a classic, with everything you could want (it's pretty much a play-by-play, with lots of screenshots and music, just without the tedium).
Drakengard 2
Main thing to keep in mind is that this game is kind of its' own thing and one I remember the least about.
Taro had no involvement beyond helping with a few CG cutscenes and the producer (I think?) of the first game had only a limited power over the development. Because of this writing can be a bit more generic and flat.
It's not all bad and story has some connections to the first game but it was intended to be a more streamlined experience.Gameplay is mostly improved but has some issues, like certain bosses requiring specific weapons (you can beat them otherwise but they'll require a lot of hits).
Play it if you really want to complete the collection but it's not necessary to experience the "main" series.Drakengard 3
This one is technically a prequel to all the other games.
Yoko Taro is back in the writer's seat for this one and the overall story is better than D2 in my opinion. I already mentioned the humor in this one - it can be a bit crude and vulgar so your enjoyment of those parts will depend on how well it clicks with you.
Story has the usual Taro flair and can be further enhanced with the DLC which expands on each of the antagonists (I don't know how easy it is to get these days).It's not a great game from a technical perspective - it runs like garbage on the original hardware (framerate can fall to single digits at times) and can look a bit dated even compared to other games from 2013. Some of it can be improved with emulation but I'm not sure to what extent.
Gameplay is further improved (there's still a lot of jank) and way easier to fully complete so there's that. If you survived the original Nier you should be fine.
It can be an interesting experience if you like stories by Yoko Taro, just don't expect a good game (this sentiment can be extended to all pre-Nier Automata games to various extent).
- Comment on Suggest me some games overlooked on PS3 platform (±emulation) 9 months ago:
If you're looking for something relaxing there's Afrika - a photography game with a (light?) sim focus.
If you're fine with kind of mediocre gameplay, rough performance and interesting writing: Drakengard 3. The occasional humor may or may not be your cup of tea but the overall story is worth it - it does require replaying stages and some grinding if you want to reach the true ending however.
- Submitted 9 months ago to games@lemmy.world | 0 comments
- Comment on Baldur’s Gate 3 boss says gamers don’t want mass subscriptions 10 months ago:
Just wanted to mention that just like with any other F2P games, there are gacha titles that are fun without paying anything. Not as many as the predatory kind but still.
- Comment on Baldur’s Gate 3 boss says gamers don’t want mass subscriptions 10 months ago:
My point is that however you feel about microtransactions they are successful and that's why they're so common.
With subscription services you and me can think "I want to own it and play whenever" but a lot (not only casual) players see it as "I pay a few $ and get access to a huge library of games I can try out for the next month".
As I wrote initially, just because more dedicated audience doesn't like the direction industry is moving in doesn't mean majority will care enough to stop it.
- Comment on Baldur’s Gate 3 boss says gamers don’t want mass subscriptions 10 months ago:
As much as I agree with his sentiment, this title is bullshit - he never wrote "gamers don't want subscriptions" but that they shouldn't want that due to where it might lead.
"Gamers" aren't some hivemind entity that wants a specific thing. Many people don't worry whether an idea pushed by the publishers will have a long term negative effect on the industry, they just want to have fun with their hobby.
Look at microtransactions - there's a lot of negative discussion about them and yet they bring huge amounts of money, who's to say if the same won't happen with subscription services? We might not like it but majority doesn't necessarily care.
Sorry for being pedantic about a title but third-parties changing someone's words is a bit of a pet peeve of mine.
- Comment on Community for finding communities? 10 months ago:
There are also these two sites:
- Comment on How do I find communities on Lemmy? 1 year ago:
Besides already mentioned methods there's also Lemmy Community-Browser.
It has a search bar and ability to toggle specific instances in case you want to avoid some of them. A bit simpler version of Lemmy Explorer mentioned by @DogMuffins.
- Comment on [deleted] 1 year ago:
I guess it depends on your motivation for said project.
Do you enjoy the process of working on the project? Do you use it to learn new things and improve the skills required for it? Or all you care about is the end project?
If it's the last one I can see why you could get discouraged but if it's the other two then not really.
If I work on something specific I do it because I want to create this thing using my skills, experience and ideas. I also try to do as much of it as I can on my own, without using other's people assets etc. For me, the work I put in is an important of the process and each step towards completion makes me a little proud and happy that I can create something.
At the same time I'm a weirdo who tends to use less efficient methods if they aren't as fun to use when working on personal projects. I don't really care about using AI in the first place so that might skew my view a bit.
There's also the fact that AI isn't omnipotent. It makes mistakes just like us and I'd rather fix my own mistakes since this way I know what I did, how I did it and where to look when things go wrong.
Sorry for the word salad. Your post gave me a reason to spew some unfiltered thoughts about an issue I never really thought about.
- Comment on What's special about Misskey that Mastodon doesn't have? 1 year ago:
Why do we need lemmy and kbin? Why do we need various linux distros? Why do we need different office suites?
Having a choice is always a positive, more so if those alternatives are compatible like various activity pub projects.
I don't have an up to date feature comparison between Mastodon and Misskey but some of the things that differentiated the latter were:
- better threading
- improved markdown support (animated, also could render LaTeX formatting if I'm recall correctly)
- calendar
- drive
- emoji reactions (this replaces "likes" for example)
- trends
- tips for newcomers
Keep in mind, these are from few years ago so some things may have been changed or added to Mastodon (I'm not too familiar with Twitter like projects in general).
There's also already mentioned focus on Japanese audience - some of it comes down to already mentioned features (I feel like western social media aren't as... animated? as Asian or at least Japanese ones), as well as culture (I think this picture of one of the tips is a good start.
I'm sure someone more familiar with both can come up with a better comparison but I think that the main point of just having an option is the most valid one.