Are you crazy? I'm not going to play boys that look like pamela anderson!
Pamela Anderson has big jugs, though, and dick chicks haven't crossed over into mainstream Jap games, yet.
Are you crazy? I'm not going to play boys that look like pamela anderson!
aries202 said:The Greek men in 300 were not Greeks, they were Spartans.
... The typical Greek man being what he is, the soldiers in 300 should either have looked like they were wearing a sweater or spent a LOT more time shaving ...
Vault Dweller said:Are you trying to make a point that there are more action RPGs in development than the market can support? Nicely done, old boy.Sir_Brennus said:*list of action RPG, action games with RPG elements, and games that really shouldn't be called RPGs*
Did I say that? Did you miss relatively recent Space Siege, Avencast, Paradise City, and Argonauts newsposts?Sir_Brennus said:So, the Codex doesn't cover ACRPGs no longer?
I wasn't impressed by these games and haven't seen any good coverage worth reporting, but if you feel I missed a good article, give me a link and I'll make proper newsposts.- Day Watch: Turn-based / Choices / Character development
- Not the Time for Dragons: Party-based / top-down / skill-trees / side-quests/ BG like combat
- Hard to be a God: Non-linear gameplay / extensive dialogue system / party based/ BG like combat
- Grotesque - Heroes hunted: NOT an action CRPG / "reminds one of the cult classic in RPGs, Planescape Torment." (from their website)
Everyone's a critic, eh?I could continue the list, but I am not the biased newsposter who should check his facts before posting insults or generally unfunny jokes.
Ok. Will you please make short characterizations for all RPGs in development, "including the information in how far these games are "serious" CRPGs"?If you want me to make a short characterisation of ALL those games in development for the news-section, including the information in how far these games are "serious" CRPGs, you only have to ask.
Vault Dweller said:Most reviews agree that the game sucks ass.
Gamer Node:
"Day Watch has an interesting concept and some neat spells, but its buried underneath miles of poorly translated text, poor AI (stupid pathfinding problems -- ugh!), lanky animations, obvious graphical glitches, and a poorly implemented RPG system."
PC Gamer UK:
"Completely broken and utterly idiotic in almost every way."
http://www.metacritic.com/games/platforms/pc/daywatch
So, the Codex doesn't cover ACRPGs no longer?
P.S. Will do some more research and assemble some links for news on the aforementioned games in the next two weeks. It may take a while, but I will do so.
Well, they're still honest and haven't given in to the temptations of "World Exclusice Rights if You Give the Game a 7+ Page Hype Preview" deals. I certainly don't read it for their RPG reviews, as they adore Oblivion and Bioware's hits while being harsher towards better games like Arcanum and Bloodlines.Kingston said:Hey Jora, I haven't read any Finnish gaming magazines in quite a while. I do remember Pelit being quite an honest and high quality magazine, but it started to show some hints of the retardation that plagues the gaming press. Is it still any good, or is it just another pr/hype magazine nowadays?
Mikail said:I think someone should make a sitcom where Volourn moves in with DGaider.
Shoelip said:Mikail said:I think someone should make a sitcom where Volourn moves in with DGaider.
"Mister Gaider! What are we going to do today?"
"Get away from me you freak! What the fuck are you doing in my house?!"
"I'm your room mate."
"I'll never drink again!"
*Canned laughter.*
Slith said:I'd always thought the Spartans were the least gay of the Greek city-states.
constantly training together, day after day, sometimes nude and oiled
Shoelip said:constantly training together, day after day, sometimes nude and oiled...
That was more of an Athenian thing, IIRC (Edit: I was kinda right):Oarfish said:constantly training together, day after day, sometimes nude and oiled
That and the fact it was considered a civic duty for older Spartans to screw them in the arse.
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0210;query=chapter%3D%2322;layout=;loc=Const.%20Lac.%201.1 said:[12] I think I ought to say something also about intimacy with boys, since this matter also has a bearing on education. In other Greek states, for instance among the Boeotians, man and boy live together, like married people;5 elsewhere, among the Eleians, for example, consent is won by means of favours. Some, on the other hand, entirely forbid suitors to talk with boys.
[13] The customs instituted by Lycurgus were opposed to all of these. If someone, being himself an honest man, admired a boy's soul and tried to make of him an ideal friend without reproach and to associate with him, he approved, and believed in the excellence of this kind of training. But if it was clear that the attraction lay in the boy's outward beauty, he banned the connexion as an abomination; and thus he caused lovers to abstain from boys no less than parents abstain from sexual intercourse with their children and brothers and sisters with each other.