Pokemon is a JRPG, or, You Learn Something New Every Day

Image by Flickr user around4o'clock
Image by Flickr user around4o’clock

Japanese role playing games (JRPGs) aren’t common in my regular gaming roster. The last JRPG I attempted was Xenoblade Chronicles. It’s a beautiful and brilliant game, but after learning about the extreme lengths I’d need to go to beat it, I had to set it aside. (A long and intensive game like that requires frequent play — one or two sessions a month just doesn’t cut it.) What drew me to Xenoblade was the success I had had with The Last Story, a really fantastic JRPG that breaks from tradition in combat but not in style. I’ve played a handful of Final Fantasy games and have happily rolled through JRPG-ish games like Kingdom Hearts and South Park: The Stick of Truth. In three decades of gaming, I’d say that JRPGs comprise around ten percent of my gaming experience.

Continue reading Pokemon is a JRPG, or, You Learn Something New Every Day

A Plea for FF8 Assistance

Image from Flickr User: metallimaniac
Image from Flickr User: metallimaniac

With Cary and Jacob already on their quests to complete “Metroid Prime” and “Final Fantasy VII”, respectively, it got me thinking of a quest of my own that I would like to accomplish one day. My own game to complete is “Final Fantasy VIII”. I have reached the final boss, but I just can’t beat it. I have tried time and time again, but I just can’t seem to prevail. And I need help, or else I may never overcome my obvious incompetence, and that’s why I write this plea to all you fellow gamers out there, with one big question….

What the crap? Continue reading A Plea for FF8 Assistance

Final Fantasy VII: Finally Finished!

(Images Captured By Hatmonster)

Well it’s finished. After seven years of trying to get through the game only to be distracted away from it time and again, it’s finally done. I’ve finally beaten Final Fantasy VII! It took over 45 hours spread over a month of dedicating normal play hours (as well as sneaking in time whenever I could find it), but it’s finally done…and It was totally worth it! Continue reading Final Fantasy VII: Finally Finished!

Lead, and I shall more than likely follow

Image by Flickr user GloomyCorp
Image by Flickr user GloomyCorp

My current game rotation consists of the following:

Metroid Prime 
LIMBO
Guacamelee (thought it’s been several weeks)
Pokemon LeafGreen 

Looking over my list, it occurred to me that the varied games on this list have one thing in common: they are mostly directionless. LIMBO actually sticks out the most in this regard as it contains absolutely no narrative about where to go or what to do in the game. The other games contain hints about your next destinations, but none tell you specifically what paths to take to get to where you need to be. All the games have logical “forward” courses. In the 2D platformer LIMBO, with just a few exceptions, you can only go forward. In Metroid Prime, the game informs you regularly of your next goal, but you can ignore the computer in favor if exploring. Guacamelee in the “Metroidvania” style shows your next location on the map, but never says “GO THERE NOW!” And in Pokemon, with its top-down view, you aren’t really told where to go next – following trails will get you to where you need to be. But you’re free to explore, and you can travel to any past points as much as you like.

Continue reading Lead, and I shall more than likely follow

Overlooked: Shamwood

Image by Flickr User: Rolo Tanedo Jr.
Image by Flickr User: Rolo Tanedo Jr.

You may remember a post I wrote about a rather monotonous game called “Quest 64”. It is truly one of the most boring games in existence (even worse than “Chain of Memories”), but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t have its secrets. Like all secrets, this one took me a while to find out about. Nevertheless, there had always been a location of the game that just seemed strange to me. Because every time I played this game, I always wondered why the desert was so darn big. If you wander about Dindom Dries, you will reach a part of the desert that consists of nothing but an endless expanse of dunes, while the map fades away to nothing. Of course, I knew the desert couldn’t really go on forever, but there were times I’d try to see where I’d end up if I just started walking, and I never got anywhere. It would always just get to a point where, no matter how long you walked forward, you would never get any farther from what lay behind. Continue reading Overlooked: Shamwood

Footnotes: Super BattleShip

Image By Flickr User: Andrew Malone (cc)

It’s difficult trying to imagine the sheer amount of games that are available to play nowadays. For every major release gamers will be queuing up for this this year there are likely hundreds of smaller games made in the hopes of nothing more than becoming at least a small blip in the industry consciousness. And for every large rehash of ideas we’ve seen before, there’s something new and fresh just waiting to be discovered. There’s just too much to play out there to notice everything, and that really is a tragedy. Continue reading Footnotes: Super BattleShip

Using Games to Get You in the Mood to…Play Games

Image by Flickr user jDevaun
Image by Flickr user jDevaun

Many of us have been there. You know that some gaming time is coming your way, be it an hour or seven, and you psych yourself up for it. You plan to jam through game after game after game! Defeating old bosses, facing new ones! Finishing that one game from your backlog that’s been bothering you, starting up that new game that you’ve been meaning to get to! You know that your gaming session is going to be EPIC!

But then that fateful hour arrives AND…you feel a little bit meh about the whole thing. Maybe you’re feeling distracted. Maybe you’re feeling tired. Maybe you just can’t get your head in the game ( no pun intended). Whatever the reason, you simply don’t feel like playing. Yet you know you just can’t let the time go by doing something else. You had it all planned out that you were going to use this time to game, and by golly, that’s what you’re going to do! Maybe all you need is a little push. Something less monumental than that heavy action shooter or 60-hour RPG to get your gaming gears greased and rolling. There are plenty of games out there that can be easily stopped and started, that don’t require a ton of brainpower off the bat, and that can serve as the perfect segues into more massive gaming showdowns. When I’m not quite in the mood to game despite having set aside time to do so, here are a few tactics I use to get the gaming juices flowing.

Continue reading Using Games to Get You in the Mood to…Play Games