Games that need to die

Games that need to die
By UNDED
 
No matter how much you want to deny it, there’s always those few games series that you wish you’ll never see again. Game titles, that upon gazing at, will immediately make you cringe. The horror just never ends. No matter how much you beg, pray, and plead to the heavens, they just never get any better. Whomever is reading this, I hope to sway your poor soul to let go. Personally, I would love to put Grand Theft Auto on this list, but if repetition was the only deciding factor, Pokémon would be the undying winner. The lack of fresh ideas with old concepts is the biggest killer of these franchises.

Assassin’s Creed

Did you really think we’d miss Assassin’s Creed? The game is centered around playing your ancestors memories from the past, and ironically, makes you play the same thing with every entry over, and over again. At first, AC was a true pioneer in the sandbox genre. The story was great, if not a little convoluted. The gameplay was unlike anything we’d ever experienced; much like how Sonic first came onto the scene after years of slowly hopping over pipes. The set pieces of the past were so gorgeously rendered and meticulously recreated they could have been shown off in history museums. Even though every game had something “new” to offer  (recruiting noob assassins, exploring tombs, and taking down pirates in battleships) it didn’t venture far enough from the main selling point of the game. Climbing and killing. Those mechanics are what made Ubisoft so much money so I can’t blame them for not straying too far from it, but before long, some of us start to question what the company has in mind for the series future.

 Dragon Ball Z Budokai

At the start of this series there lies a fresh idea for fighting games; the over the shoulder, third person camera. Akin to God of War before it, debuting epic cinematics and quick-time events (which I absolution hate BecauseThey’reGlorifiedCasinoSlotMachinesAndIfThatsYourIdeaOfGamingThenGetTheFuckOuttaMyFace). Honestly, I still appreciate DBZ:B for its contribution to games by giving us something as simple as a new camera angle, but 16 years later literally jack shit has changed. You still throw yellow snowballs at each other, you still button mash, and you still stand in the middle of the fucking arena waiting to get enough testosterone built up to bleach your hair. This series almost squeezed by with the newest entry, Dragon Ball Z: Extreme Butoden for stepping back and letting itself fall into a classic style, 2D fighting game, but it’s too little too late. It’s still a fighting game. Except now, they have deliberately changed nothing. Nope, fuck that! Don’t shit in my cereal and call it ketchup.

Final Fantasy

Before you go chasing me with your pitchforks and scythes, admit it, you see Final Fantasy so much that when you see the word fantasy written anywhere, you think Cloud. And if you don’t think about Cloud, you’re thinking of that comically large sword that attaches to his back like DMC Dante’s does (since nobody has money to pay someone to animate a sword fitting in a sheath).That’s really the only thing you can really say about Final Fantasy; The budget. Square was after the highest gain possible and thought they could blow their wad all on marketing instead of making a compelling game. I’ve never heard of anyone saying they played through Final Fantasy more than once per game. Never. There are a few that genuinely tried to be great games, I hear Final Fantasy X was one of them but Final Fantasy (more than any other series on this list) has made bold attempts to rob you of your money. ‘How could Final Fantasy 7 do that UNDED? I’ve bought and rebought that game a dozen times!’ Well I’ll tell you how in 3 simple words; All The Bravest.  

Monster Hunter

This needs to be a fuckin MMO already. Prepare your gear before you go out, check your weapons, potions, and supplies. Sharpen your blades. Gather friends. Trade a little. Head out to the hunt. Build campfires, hunt small game, use loot to make your gear better by painstakingly crafting every single digit of defense. Kill big game. Come back three hours later. Do it all again. Fuck that! I might as well just wake up and go to work. 

Mario

It’s quite apparent that Mario isn’t going anywhere, but I can’t be the only one getting sick of seeing his face everywhere. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not being disrespectful. Nintendo is a pillar of the gaming industry and has helped to elevate it to where it is now, but along with that is the saturation of Mario’s face in everyday culture. It’s starting to wear thin. The games aren’t bad. In all honesty they are some of the best ever, but goddamn if I hear “wahoo” one more fucking time, I’m going to grow a mustache just to rip it off in spite of him. I don’t believe Mario should die and just be gone forever, but a small five, maybe 20 year Hiatus would be great. Please, just temporarily retire him long enough for me to actually miss him. Long gone are the days that I hear the name Mario and actually get excited.

Football Games 

I know I can’t be the only one who looks at a game with the NFL logo on it and think ‘goddamn, here is another game that’s going to swell up the bargain bin and only make it harder to find good cheap games that I would actually want to play’. Maddengames come out so frequently and have such little improvements from the last title that you really could go fromMadden 98 to Madden 17 and not miss a beat. I don’t believe all sports games should disappear forever, just anything that tries to outdo the actual sport the game is based on. That doesn’t help anyone, it doesn’t make me want to play the game, it doesn’t make me want to watch football. I look at these games more often than I do Indie titles and think to myself ‘here’s something I absolutely will never fucking play, no matter how cheap it is. What a waste of useless plastic’. Other sports games that aren’t based off national teams, whether it be Basketball, Football, Hockey, or Soccer can really strive with the right developers. Just stop allowing EA to shit all over those respective sports with these repetitive games, and the faith will be restored. A perfect example of this is the NBA Street series, and even Mario Strikers (Still, Mario… fuck you). Fantastic sports games that have nothing to do with professional teams and actually inspired me to go out and play Soccer and Basketball. The closest game to break this mold in recent memory wasNHL ’14. ’14 was boasted as being more open to new players and for once in decades, I actually wanted to play a sports game with a professional team on it. 

 

Games don’t have to go extremely overboard to stay fresh. Call of Duty backed themselves into a corner by leading Modern Warfare out into space. Anything else they come up with will need to top that emotionally because cinematically, they have nowhere else to go. On the other side of that same coin, if games don’t progress and just release annually without striving to do better and giving you the same experience, before long, $60 for the same game that came out three years earlier is sounding a hell of a lot more expensive than you’d expect. I experienced this myself when I started waiting two years before buying a new Assassin’s Creed, or CoD. Only the strong survive, and if your series isn’t helping to push the gaming medium out of the “kids toy” reputation that we have (no doubt from stupid kids that want to get online and call everybody’s mom a twat), then you’re only hindering our growth. 

Playstation Flash Sale May 20, 206

PlayStation 4

  • ArcaniA: The Complete Tale – $4.99
  • Beach Buggy Racing – $2.49
  • Boggle – $3.49
  • Defense Grid 2 – $2.99
  • Don’t Starve – $4.49
  • Don’t Starve + Reign of Giants – $4.74
  • Entwined (cross-buy) – $3.99
  • Flower – $2.79
  • Geometry Wars 3: Dimensions Evolved – $4.94
  • Grim Fandango Remastered – $4.49
  • Grow Home – $2.79
  • Hitman GO Definitive Edition – $3.19
  • I Am Bread – $4.54
  • Killzone Shadow Fall – $4.99
  • King’s Quest Chapter 2 – $3.89
  • Murdered: Soul Suspect – $4.49
  • Nidhogg – $4.49
  • Outlast – $4.99
  • Pure Pool – $4.99
  • Riptide GP2 – $1.74
  • Rogue Legacy – $4.24
  • Scrabble – $4.94
  • Sound Shapes – $3.99
  • Super Mega Baseball – $4.99
  • Surgeon Simulator: A&E Anniversary Edition – $2.59
  • Terraria – $4.99
  • The Banner Saga – $4.99
  • The Castle Game – $4.49
  • The Golf Club – $4.49
  • The Jackbox Party Pack – $4.99
  • The Jackbox Party Pack 2 – $4.99
  • The Walking Dead: The Complete First Season – $4.99
  • The Wolf Among Us – $4.99
  • Thief – $4.49
  • Transistor – $4.99
  • Trivial Pursuit Live! – $4.94
  • Zombi – $4.99

PlayStation 3

  • Borderlands – $4.99
  • Borderlands 2 – $4.99
  • Bully – $3.99
  • Dead Island Riptide Complete Edition – $4.99
  • Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Z – $4.49
  • DuckTales Remastered – $4.49
  • Duke Nukem Forever – $3.99
  • Entwined (cross-buy) – $3.99
  • Far Cry 3 – $4.99
  • Geometry Wars 3: Dimensions Evolved – $4.94
  • Hitman: Absolution Special Edition – $3.99
  • Hitman: Blood Money HD – $4.24
  • Hitman Trilogy HD – $3.99
  • I Am Alive – $2.99
  • Journey – $4.49
  • Just Cause 2 – $3.99
  • Just Cause 2 Ultimate Edition – $4.49
  • King’s Quest Chapter 2 – $3.89
  • LA Noire – $4.49
  • LittleBigPlanet – $4.99
  • LittleBigPlanet 2 – $4.49
  • LittleBigPlanet Karting – $4.49
  • Manhunt – $3.99
  • Max Payne 3 – $3.99
  • Max Payne – $3.99

PlayStation Vita

  • Don’t Starve: Giant Edition – $4.49
  • Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Z – $4.99
  • Entwined (cross-buy) – $3.99
  • Freedom Wars – $4.49
  • Geometry Wars 3: Dimensions Evolved – $4.94
  • Grim Fandango Remastered – $4.49
  • Hitman GO Definitive Edition – $3.19
  • Killzone Mercenary – $4.99
  • LittleBigPlanet PS Vita – $4.49

PlayStation Portable

  • Manhunt 2 – $4.49

Koihime Enbu Review

Review

It has been a very exciting last couple of years being a fighting game player thanks Valve’s digital distribution platform, Steam. If you wanted to play the latest efforts in the genre from places like China or Japan, you would have to bypass Sony’s PSN region lock by registering a PSN ID from the respective market where the game is able to be published at the moment, follow an online guide to navigate through the now foreign PSN store, activate the prepaid card you purchased from an import website,  AND THEN buy a game in which you still needed the same online guide brought up previously to be able find the training and versus modes in the main menu once you launch the game. Thankfully, Eastern publishers are starting to see the benefits on bringing over their catalog to Steam and it is now easier than ever to play games such as Koihime Enbu in the US market.

The UI is well organized and nice to look at!

Originally an arcade fighting game, Koihime Enbu was ported to consoles back in January, but only available in Japan. Thanks to publisher Degica Games, an English release is now available here in the West on PC. Now, what this means is that the game itself is mostly the same from its console counterpart. The original text has either been replaced or supplemented with smaller, English text. There’s not a lot of options when it comes to graphics: just an option to set the game either windowed or full-screen mode, plus an stretch filter to try to smooth out the graphics. Thankfully, you can use a separate key configuration tool to set up your DirectInput controllers or arcade sticks before launching the game. Even better if you have an XInput device, since the game supports them automatically which allows you to just plug in and play.

The Game Configuration Menu

Going back to the game itself, you have your standard game options you come to expect in most fighting games nowadays; a versus mode that allows you to play against someone next to you, a training mode to practice your execution, a story mode to continue the franchise’s overall story, and online play. There’s also Versus CPU, Replay, and even a gallery. There’s no tutorial mode, but it is to be expected. If you’re used to playing Japanese fighting games you know this comes with the territory. Other than that, the publisher was able to integrate Steam Community features such as trading cards, backgrounds and emoticons. A nice little upgrade from the console release to keep players interested.
[Note: There are websites such as Dustloop (http://dustloop.com) or the Mizuumi Fighting Game Wiki (http://wiki.mizuumi.net/w/Koihime_Enbu) that can assist you in learning the mechanics of this game.]

The Main Menu

The game play is similar to most anime fighting games currently available, it even features the same  A/B/C and special button layout. You’re able to choose over 13 different characters, but every one of them follow the same commands when it comes to execution. What this means is that the learning curve when learning a characters is much lower which can allow you to play more characters faster. Additionally, you are able to choose one of two assists that act more as a special move rather than a separate character, which changes the perspective of the game from a team based game to more of a traditional 1 on 1 setting in which you’re allowed to choose over two special move before a match. A major game play mechanic in this game is the Fatal Counter system, which gives you access to certain moves that have special properties when used correctly. This turns the game into more a Street Fighter type of fighting game, where you will need to mind your spacing and footsies, no need to worry about air-dashing here.

“Dat hitbox doe”

With its cute art style and surprisingly deep game play system, Koihime Enbu is a fine addition to Steam’s ever-growing list of fighting games options. Not a game to be recommended for the starting fighting game fan due to its confusing story and lack of information on how to learn the game, but one that any experienced player or fan of the Koihime Musou series should definitely check out. As a PC port, I believe it does the job well, no issues or bugs were to be found upon launching and playing the game. Do be aware that the online mode was not able to be tested for this review, so your mileage may vary once the game goes live. Koihime Enbu will be available on May 19th on Steam for $40 on release, let us know if you’ll pick it up (or if you already got a waifu selected).
 

Nintendo Announced New Update on Pokemon Sun and Moon

More Pokemon News

Nintendo has announced the next update on Pokemon Sun and Pokemon Moon will arrive on Thursday, June 2. Earlier this month we had our first look at the new starter Pokemon’s along with the announcement of the global release date. We can be looking forward for this announcement to be something big. Pokemon Sun and Pokemon Moon are due out on November 18 in North America

If you missed the announcement about the new starter Pokemon’s click the video below.

Batman is Returning to Arkham

Batman is back to the City and asylum

Announced today, “Batman Return to Arkham”  is bringing you back to the first two games in a HD remaster due out for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One in North America on July 26 will cost $49.99. Be sure to read the overview and check out the trailer below

  • Batman: Arkham Asylum

Batman: Arkham Asylum is where it all began. Originally developed by Rocksteady Studios and released in 2009, the game pushed the envelope for action, adventure and super hero games and exposed players to a unique, dark and atmospheric adventure taking them to the depths of Arkham Asylum. Featuring an original story, gamers can move in the shadows, instill fear amongst their enemies and confront The Joker and Gotham City’s most notorious villains, including Harley Quinn, Bane, Killer Croc, Poison Ivy and Scarecrow, who have taken over the asylum.

  • Batman: Arkham City

Batman: Arkham City is Rocksteady Studios’ 2011 follow-up to Batman: Arkham Asylum. The game builds upon the intense, atmospheric foundation of Batman: Arkham Asylum, sending players soaring through the expansive Arkham City – the maximum security “home” for all of Gotham City’s thugs, gangsters and insane criminal masterminds. Featuring an incredible Rogues Gallery of Gotham City’s most dangerous criminals including Catwoman, The Joker, The Riddler, Two-Face, Harley Quinn, The Penguin, Mr. Freeze and many others, the game allows players to experience what it feels like to be The Dark Knight and deliver justice to those confined within Arkham City.