mouser
Business of Hockey
Been playing Dave the Diver this week, really fun enjoyable game, kudos to the developers.
Same here. I've downloaded TONS of games and really like the catalogue tbh. Quite a lot of the time I spend playing on my playstation I am playing games offered through PS Plus. I've discovered some of my favorite recent games through PS Plus, as well as getting to play old games on the classics catalogue.I'll disagree that PS+ isn't worth it after a year.
I love the fact that in the Witcher 3, you can tackle the story in wildly different orders. That depending on the order you take, you get different dialogues, reactions and options.Replaying the Witcher 3 for the first time in years. Level 16 and going to finish up some Witcher contracts before I head to Skellige. It’s a gem of a game despite many shortcomings. The world and characters are so fun they you overlook a lot of things like…
-a convoluted weapon/armor crafting system
-mid combat
-janky movement
-level suggestions on quests/contracts messing with your XP
-sword and armor loot being quickly obsolete
I’m having a hell of a time though and can’t put it down. Las time I played a few years ago I stopped right after beating the Wild Hunt and starting the HoS DLC. I was smoking too much weed at the time and hardly remember a lot of the game so it’s nice to be fully paying attention this time around.
I've put about a dozen hours into both GoT and Horizon Zero Dawn. I'll finish them both at some point but they both feel like an exhaustive open world made for the sake of it. After Witcher 3, get back into Elden Ring and stick with it man. Maybe not the DLC, as I haven't finished that and can't vouch for it, but the base game is a masterpiece. Don't get hung up on anything specific.Lol came to post about my own currently gaming experience and it's funny yall are already talking about the Witcher 3. So I bought a new PS5 somewhat recently and the first game I bought was Elden Ring. Sank about 20 hours into that but have dropped it for a while after learning the mechanics I need for a FromSoft game but the reason I quit was I spent like 4 hours trying to get what I need for a very specific build and thought I had accidentally sold a unique drop and I was so pissed off I decided to drop the game for a while and come back to it later because I also bought a year of PS+ premium and started playing ghost of tsushima from the game catalogue.
I think Ghost is a game with a solid enough combat system and a really impressive looking open world, but a lot of the side quest/open world activities were getting super repetitive after a while. Given the similarities in the open world gameplay loop I couldn't help but compare to the Witcher 3 and while that game has some repetitive "Witcher Senses investigation/tracking", I think the side content is developed with a lot more purpose.
My brother was over at my place to shoot the shit and while we were trying to figure out what to watch or play I decided to boot up Witcher 3 to let him give it a try. Just watching him play through the early White Orchard stuff gave me an itch to play through it for the fourth time with the next gen update.
There's no question the movement is still janky and the combat is lackluster, especially after playing Ghost, but the Witcher 3 always scratched an itch for me with its overall immersion in its story with its fully voice acted and animated cutscenes. I've always been a bit of a cutscene skipper but the Witcher 3 feels like playing through a Game of Thrones-esque story with great characters throughout and because of that I can somewhat forgive the technical weaknesses because I'm made to step into Geralt's shoes in a phenomenally realized story and the combat, while janky, services that story well. Yeah the last act is a bit rushed but the DLCs more than make up for that.
For my needs, I still have The Witcher 3 as my favorite open world game of all time with RDR2 and Breath of the Wild just behind. I can appreciate the artistry of Ghost of Tsushima but while the main story (and side story) content is strong the repetitive open world stuff and half baked character animation drags it back. Elden Ring, maybe I didn't play long enough to appreciate the full package but the open world feels like a supplement to its collection of big boss encounters. It's a stellar game for sure, but it hasn't really sparked as something truly special for me yet.
I just had this feeling of like "okay I've beaten two notably tough bosses and I just realized I didn't sell off the thing I need for my build and I just finished putting it together...now f***ing what?" like I'll wander around fighting in world mobs and just have no idea where to go next. I know that's part of the fun but I feel like I'm pulled to play through Ghost and TW3 too. I'll get back to it eventually. And after that I'll get back to Tears of the Kingdom cause I put like 70 hours into that game just exploring and experimenting with the new mechanics and have played almost zero of the story content lol.Man, these Bandits in TW3 sure are ballsy. They talk a lot of shit for having just seen or heard about me slicing their buddies in half.
I've put about a dozen hours into both GoT and Horizon Zero Dawn. I'll finish them both at some point but they both feel like an exhaustive open world made for the sake of it. After Witcher 3, get back into Elden Ring and stick with it man. Maybe not the DLC, as I haven't finished that and can't vouch for it, but the base game is a masterpiece. Don't get hung up on anything specific.
Kind of like BOTW where all you really need to do is beat Ganon, all you really need to do in Elden Ring is beat two rune bearers and become Elden Lord. The entire rest of the game is completely open to you. Do what you like, skip what you don't, and get stronger along the way.
HFW is one of the greatest games of all time. Get out of your own head and just give it a try. It’s absolutely spectacular.When i played Horizon Zero Dawn, i had a blast mostly because i liked hunting down the different monsters. But now, i really have no desire to play the sequel or a game like Ghost of Tsushima because like some of you have already mentioned, the maps are big for the sake of being big. They suffer from the same problem as Ubisoft games when it comes to that.
A game like Kingdom Come: Deliverance is more of my style. I never expected to enjoy the game as much as i did. The world is not too big and it's quite immersive with many interesting quests and dialogues. The sequel is bigger but it seems by the trailers that they kept the core aspects from the first game so it won't be just a bigger game for the sake of making it bigger.