What's a game you've played that you're surprised isn't really popular?
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Yeah, 'google en passant' is an r/AnarchyChess joke.
Unless you are in on it, in which case damn, you're stone cold.
In theory, you can always promote to a rook just to show off. I have no idea if it's considered a bad mannered move.
Ah I see. Thanks for explaining. I wasn't in on it heh.
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Quake Champions is pretty great, surprised it's not at least a little bigger
I'm content with OpenArena, so Quake 3 with open source graphics so you can install and play it anywhere. What does champions do that I'm missing out on?
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Plasma - a wildly programmable physics game where you can build just about anything in a fairly accessible manner. The devs eventually just made it free because it wasn't getting much notice.
BPM: Bullets Per Minute - at some point everyone thinks 'what if you combined an FPS with a rhythm game so you had to shoot on the beat?' BPM is that, nailed. Others have tried but BPM got it right.
Crypt of the Necrodancer is probably my favorite weird rhythm game; I may have to give BPM a try, sounds right up my alley!
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Kunitsu-Gami. I tried the demo and spent 8 hours on it trying to get everything perfect, which made me realize I should just buy it. It was a total delight. I didn't expect it, never even heard of it honestly, but I can't stop recommending it.
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I'm content with OpenArena, so Quake 3 with open source graphics so you can install and play it anywhere. What does champions do that I'm missing out on?
I'm not familiar with Open Arena so hard for my to say a lot, but QC def feels way more modern than the other Quake's in a way I appreciate a lot.
The graphics, audio, cosmetics, etc are all awesome. SyncError is also an excellent map designer and I love the maps he releases
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Meinkraft
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For video games, Ostranauts. It's the perfect space survival sim IMO. You wake up on an industrial salvage station and get a ship. Then you fly to derelict ships and scrap them for money and parts. Build up your own ship and travel farther and farther out. It's jank as fuck to learn but once you get it down it's the type of game where you put on music then just go for hours and hours. It's early access and a lot is changing but the core gameplay loop is so addicting already.
For tabletop games, Infinity. It's the best miniatures skirmish game I've ever played. The rules are deep but tight. The number of minis you put on the table is just right to me. List building is the best of any game I ever played. The rules are free. The app is free. The miniatures are the best out of any wargame I've ever played. It's just a shame that people are so locked into Games Workshop that they don't see other games as an option. Like I had a couple friends get hardcore into it but never more than that. And at the height of it's popularity at our store we had one of the best players on the East coast play in a tournament. That was a sight to behold. Like I'm not a tourney player at all for any game. Watching the number 1 east coast player do his thing was the most inspired I ever was to become a tournament player.
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For video games, Ostranauts. It's the perfect space survival sim IMO. You wake up on an industrial salvage station and get a ship. Then you fly to derelict ships and scrap them for money and parts. Build up your own ship and travel farther and farther out. It's jank as fuck to learn but once you get it down it's the type of game where you put on music then just go for hours and hours. It's early access and a lot is changing but the core gameplay loop is so addicting already.
For tabletop games, Infinity. It's the best miniatures skirmish game I've ever played. The rules are deep but tight. The number of minis you put on the table is just right to me. List building is the best of any game I ever played. The rules are free. The app is free. The miniatures are the best out of any wargame I've ever played. It's just a shame that people are so locked into Games Workshop that they don't see other games as an option. Like I had a couple friends get hardcore into it but never more than that. And at the height of it's popularity at our store we had one of the best players on the East coast play in a tournament. That was a sight to behold. Like I'm not a tourney player at all for any game. Watching the number 1 east coast player do his thing was the most inspired I ever was to become a tournament player.
Ostranauts still needs time to cook but there's nothing quite like getting your first torch lit, nearly starving during the trip to Venus and then spending days stuck in a crash couch while your earther pilot supervises the burn that nearly kills you. Definitely room to grow.
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Battletech should be the king of tabletop wargames. But no, everyone just wants to play 40k because of the sunk cost.
Battletech is insane but the 40k universe is a much bigger hook because it's somehow even more insane. Also I grew up with it, didn't really look much into the battletech universe until the other year.
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Battletech is insane but the 40k universe is a much bigger hook because it's somehow even more insane. Also I grew up with it, didn't really look much into the battletech universe until the other year.
Yes I understand, im talking from a mechanical perspective
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Ostranauts still needs time to cook but there's nothing quite like getting your first torch lit, nearly starving during the trip to Venus and then spending days stuck in a crash couch while your earther pilot supervises the burn that nearly kills you. Definitely room to grow.
I agree that it still needs a cooking, but what's there is already so good. Salmon is great raw or cooked.
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I got into the Battletech universe from the Mechwarrior PC games. Which...long story short, MW2: 31st Century Combat and MW4: Vengeance were really bad at indicating there was a whole franchise behind them. I learned it was a whole big thing from guys I met on MW4's online multiplayer. Who here remembers MSN Gaming Zone?
I tried to pick up the BATTLETECH game on Steam not too long ago, on the understanding that it's a computerized version of the tabletop game's rules...and bounced right off it. First of all, it has like, a Campaign mode and a Career mode? How are those different? Then both launching the game and starting a career play an intro cinematic longer than the Lord of the Rings franchise. I mean fuck, Tex of the Black Pants Legion doesn't talk this much about mechs. The story is, to me, the least interesting thing Battletech can do: You're some nothing fuck mercenary working for some nothing fuck duchess on some nothing fuck periphery planet.
Three and a half months after the Steam return window passes, I finally get into the game to play the tutorial mission. It's popping up text on the screen to teach how to control the game, meanwhile there's a voiceover saying different things trying to tell the story of the Nothing Fuck Roughriders and their quest to avenge Lady Nothing Fuck of Nothing Fuckersville. It hit me with both simultaneously.
Software I hate does not stay installed on my computer.
Its a great game though
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Its a great game though
It rather thoroughly wore out its welcome with me.
Steam says I played it 28 minutes. Most of that was sitting through intro cinematic. I didn't finish the tutorial mission, I'd be surprised if 5 minutes out of that 28 was actually spent in-engine playing the actual game.
Forgot to mention, the amount of real estate on the title screen trying to get me to buy more shit...that scraped my taint more than a little. I've blacklisted entire studios for less.
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Simon the Sorcerer
It always seems to be overshadowed by Monkey Island. Personally I think it's actually better in many ways.
I looooved Simon The Sorcerer so much as a child! One of my favourite point and click adventures.
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I don't remember much of the specifics, but I remember it was with Dr Medico's alternate. It was something about being healed by the rest of the team which turned into damage that was redirected (and enhanced) where we wanted. I remember being able to do ~50 damage in a single turn.
Dr Medico's Signature and a Unity allowed to build up are some of the craziest forces in the game, I love it