Wednesday, October 31, 2018

One more for the Road

Yesterday the announcement was made that a new-mini console will be rearing it's head: A Mini-PlayStation will be coming out loaded with games.

I suppose this shouldn't come as a surprise as clearly people will buy things that are already easily available elsewhere Nostalgia sells. What is equally unsurprising is that Final Fantasy 7 and Metal Gear Solid are present and accounted for.
The real surprises however are a) the third of the 'Big Three', Castlevania Symphony of the Night is absent and b) there were actually enough PS1 games to fill out the rest of the console beyond the 'Big Three'.

Okay, okay, sarcasm aside, Having the PS1 re-released as mini-console shouldn't come as a surprise considering the success of the mini-SNES, Megadrive/Genesis and NES but exactly what does a new Mini-console bring to the table? Okay so not all of these games listed are available on the PSN but, lest we forget, this is a field that is advancing at a rate that is so rapid, it's alarming. Subsequently, many old games can get lost by the wayside and, unfortunately, claimed by the ravager that is time.
People lament about games you can no longer play. Games that, even not reaching enough people, presented new ideas that drew some attention. So why leave such iterations forgotten and unplayed? Why abandon such historical documents?

Of course, even as I type these words, i already know the answer: The four consoles that did get the mini-console treatment were all big sellers. Proof that, if anything, history is written by the winners.
Eventually however, the mini-consoles will run out of winners to rehash so what will happen next? Will they start focusing on the losers of the console war? Will we see rehashes of the Mega CD? Or the Saturn? Or worse?

It may not happen which is a shame: The above mentioned consoles may be mocked as failures but it does have it;s supporters that contend that both consoles had some diamonds in the rough. And I would like to see those diamonds given new light and show current gamers some noteworthy titles that they may not have been aware of.
I mean, you don't want the pirates to win, right?

Monday, October 29, 2018

Lost Weekend

This weekend I've spent a large amount of time on the Xbox One Scorpio (and yes I will keep referring to it as Scorpio).

A lot of it has been playing Red Dead Redemption 2 and...

.....ha ha, just messing with you. I've been using it to revisit games I'd got off of XBLA.

Granted this way of doing things may not be what Microsoft want me to do as a consumer but hey, I know what I want to play.

Friday, October 26, 2018

You're the One that I Want

So, this happened:


Yep, it finally happened. I shelled out for an eighth generation console having resisted for so long. I picked up an Xbox One S(corpio). One could say that is just in time for Red Dead Redemption 2 but more likely it was the necessity to keep up with a tech race that is forever ten steps ahead.

Grumbling aside, I have so far been fiddling around with the console, learning how the apps work and uploading all my saved games off the 360 and onto the cloud storage. A slow starter yes but this does begin a new chapter in my gaming history.

Whether that is a good thing or not, however, remains to be seen....

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Homecoming

Another game has been cast down from my Hall of Shame. Clean out your desk Homeworld, you're outta here!

Original image located here. Accessed 24th October 2018 


Man has this been a long time coming. It was released in 1999, I got the game off the shelf in 2009 and then I complete it in 2018. Of course I could've waited out another year but why on earth would I do that?

Anywho, this game is nothing short of impressive - even with the time of nineteen years. I could say that the novelty of the 3d would be enough but the game truly excels with it's narrative, it's presentation and the music - notably the use of Barber's Adagio for Strings and Yes' The Ladder.
Indeed, this is game that has truly benefited from a revamp by Gearbox, adding to the beauty and immersion tenfold. 

Of course these words are typed through the perspective of a) having played through the revamp and b) the distance of nineteen years since it's original release. But what I find particularly fascinating is that time was not ravaged this game at all. It still has an impressiveness that a lot of modern games can only dream of and is still as compelling, and still quite capable of being heart rendering.  

In fact, one gets the feeling the destruction of Kharak is the PC's answer to the PlayStation's death of Aerith. 

Monday, October 22, 2018

For the Record

Here's something I obtained earlier this year:


Oooooooooooooooooh yes.

Friday, October 5, 2018

R.I.P. Ben Daglish















Original video located here. Accessed 5th October 2018

R.I.P. Ben Daglish