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  • I've been replaying Subnautica. It feels like a completely different game the second time around, but still fun. Plus they've got it running much better now than it was on launch.

    • Had a blast playing Subnautica last year.

      I then waited to start playing Subnautica: Below Zero on the Steamdeck while on a flight for a work trip and that was a great experience.

      The story hadn't gripped me as much though.

      Played it for a few weeks, but eventually lost a few days worth of progress when the deck reset and I hadn't saved in a while so I haven't gone back to it just yet because I was bummed.
      It's been long enough that I could get back into it without unconsciously trying to retrace my exact steps. Thanks for reminding me about Subnautica.

  • Yakuza 0. Sorry, emotional and compelling main story, you're gonna have to wait. I need to make Majima's hostess club the top in Sotenbori.

    • I just almost finished yakuza 0 yesterday, got stuck on the last fight, so will play some sleeping dogs in the meantime until I g3met the will to retry the fight for the 70th times ( I'm playing on the hard difficulty )

  • Finished the Metro series, i played the first two years ago and playing it again now is still so good! The story is engaging and i love the setting, gameplay might be dated but it still work.

    Then there's Exodus, if the first two is a roller coaster, then Exodus is a 20 hours road trip, sometime it's interesting, sometime it's boring. It's a downgrade from the linear story telling of the first two games, with 6 chapter split into 3 linear, 2 open world and 1 semi-open world. The open world chapter is basically ubisoft level of boring, with mostly empty landscape and not a lot of interesting thing to see(caspian level are the worst offender), and it takes away the urgency from the story, with character telling you need to hurry but you can just spend a few day cycles wandering without consequences. There's some story element for the open world chapter that weird me out but i'm not sure how to talk about it without spoiling the story. Artyom being a silent protagonist this time makes it feels like he's a mute, everyone have sooooo many thing to say but artyom is just sitting there quietly it just felt weird.

    On the plus side, the linear level is all fantastic, with the final chapter bringing the game back to form, back to what Metro is really about. It just too bad half of the game just isn't as interesting.

  • I played a bit of daggerfall.

    I decided to roll with a bard, slapping on a full suit of chainmail and taking up a bow and fist fighting style. I learned a few recovery and utility spells, and began my first adventure!

    I regret to say it was more tedious than fun. Clearing dungeons is an enormous hassle, and theres no way (that im aware of) to find the quest items in them other than just scraping the whole thing. If there's a way to make that experience better, I'm all ears.

    The cities really made me appreciate the later game's deliberately reduced scale, I'll take the 20 residents of whiterun over the exhausting and innumerable randomly generated creeps in Daggerfall city.

  • Returning to Atelier Meruru. It's slowly growing on me, like a pink-and-yellow fungus.

  • I picked up Binding of Isaac: Rebirth and have been doing runs now and then. I played the original when it first came out and couldn't get into it; the years of development seem to have done it a lot of good, feels much more playable than I remember.

  • I'm perpetually playing Deep Rock Galactic, Halo MCC, and Team Fortress 2, but besides those, here are some other games I played in the last 30 days:

    Desktop (Pop!_OS)

    • CarX Drift Racing Online (2017) - way more difficult than I expected, but fun once you get the hang of it
    • Hylics 2 (2020) - incredible art and soundtrack
    • Landfall Archives (free - 2023) - nice collection of demos from one of my favorite indie dev studios
    • Left 4 Dead 2 (2009) - went back and played with some friends, still awesome
    • MUCK (free - 2021) - tried this out with a few friends, very fun
    • Outlast (2013) - finally completed this classic and loved it
    • POSTAL 2 (2003) - not a game I'd recommend to everyone, but if you're the type of person who would enjoy this type of humor, then you'll really enjoy it

    Steam Deck

    • American Truck Simulator (2016) - nice game to chill out to
    • Finding Paradise (2017) - incredible story
    • Totally Accurate Battle Simulator (2021) - also a nice game to chill out to, but some levels are a lot more difficult than expected (not a bad thing)
    • Vampire Survivors (2022) - I am so addicted please help
  • I wanted to play a souls like but was bored of all the actual Fromsoft games (I've played them a fucking lot) so I started up Remnant: From the Ashes to give it another shot. I got passed 2 bosses a few years ago when I was given the game, but didn't get into it at all.

    I'm reading more of the text this time and the story is kinda cool. Very Stargatey. The style is kinda weird for weirdness' sake though, and the RNG is fucking annoying (I keep getting super unlucky and having event swarm after event swarm and then I don't even get any good loot!). The bosses are hella bullshit difficulty. Like knowing the patterns isn't really helpful since the main boss doesn't really do much, but so far all of them have spawned swarms of small, fast moving enemies that do more damage than the giant monster does when it hits you with a big-ass brick.

    I kinda want to see if the second one is better. I would imagine it has to be to have gotten somewhat popular. I hadn't heard of the first until it was gifted to me; but the second one was all over the net when it first dropped.

    That isn't to say it's a bad game. It's one of those things that has the right ideas, but the implementation is just not very well done.

    Edit: God damn. I just finished it. When I made this comment, I thought I was only half way through. That was short as shit. I got... 12 hours on this character. My God. I wasn't even rushing! I was checking every single nook and cranny and exterminating every enemy before leaving a zone.

  • Lost Odyssey, a bit under 20 hours in. There are elements of it that are driving me nuts, but there's a lot I really like. I wish I'd played this 15 years ago.

  • Not sure if that really counts as "a game" for this community, but I reactivated my old Neopets account after a long hiatus. The site is still broken AF but just as fun as I remembered, and there is talk of an upcoming plot across the boards.

  • I just replayed Little Inferno after something reminded me about it and I noticed there was a DLC released (in late 2022).

    It's a sandbox puzzle game where you burn stuff in your fireplace and try to find combos. There's slightly more to it, but really just stuff that's there to stop you buying + burning everything at once and insta-completing the game.

    The DLC adds a new catalogue and more combos; if you're replaying you don't need to replay the main game too as it just adds to that (with a few changes).

  • Atomic Heart. DAMN this games good!! I know it won the steam award for visuals, but it feels like no one is playing this thing? I'm a little ways before the end of it, but it's already rocketed up to the levels of Prey or Titanfall 2 or the bioshocks for me.

  • A cousin of mine came to my house in the past holiday days and he helped me to regnite the Yu-Gi-Oh! that lives in my heart.

    He plays the new rules and such, I only know the very old ones so we had a few matches with the older ones.

    With that said that motivated me to get a videogame of that, I first tried with Duel Links and Master Duel for Android, but then I noticed that Link Evolution was a thing for Nintendo Switch and I got it, it was perfect as it has all the Yu-Gi-Oh! plot I know and more, so I'm gonna use it kinda as a tutorial to learn the new stuff as it kinda takes you by the hand at the start of the new arcs... And you can play with historic decks (the ones that characters used to fight, or at least the most similar) which makes it fun and frustrating depending on the RNG of the CPU lol, anyway if it is getting hard you can create your own deck and pretty much beat them easily.

    So yeah, any old Yu-Gi-Oh! Players around here?

  • I recently got a bonus from work and decided to buy a PS5 (I’m usually on pc). As a massive souls fan who’s never owned a PlayStation, my first two games I’ve tried out were Bloodborne and the Demon’s Souls remake. I always like to keep a non-souls game in the rotation too, so I’ve been blasting through Spiderman Remastered. All have been a ton of fun so far.

  • Assassin's Creed Origins, I picked up the 3 pack last year of Origins, Valhalla, and Odyssey on sale, and am just having the time to sit down to play Origins.

  • I've got a base PS4 and started playing God of War (2018) over the holidays. The wife and I love it so far. She's really into Greek and Norse mythology so she's really invested in the story and is sitting with me while I play it. We're already excited to pick up Ragnarok next.

  • I was playing a lot of WWF No Mercy recently. Absolutely a gem of a game, it's very fun despite the wonky N64 control scheme. Kid me would've probably loved this game back in the day, but alas.

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