Posts Tagged ‘Mad World’

DoFuss’s Top 5 of 2009. Kind of.

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

In a year that has seen the industry losing momentum in the face of the economic down turn and many games moving in to Q1 2010 it is hard to pretend that this was the best year for gaming. It is a however year that saw a more constant release of quality titles through out the year than long term gamers have come to expect. It is a trend that looks set to continue; though I do with they would give me a little time to recover from the (still inevitable) Christmas rush.

Due to the general difficulty for me to importing Wii titles my focus has unfortunately slanted away from Nintendo’s device this year. This combined with the iPhone dominating my mobile gaming, it seem looking back that I may have missed a number of titles that some would consider key to this year line-up. But my time is not infinite, and nor are my pockets, so while I have tried a wide array of title some have naturally fallen by the way side.

All that aside I have played a lot of incredible games this year, and honourable mentions for those that didn’t make my top five should are in order. From the downloadable games of the year we have Drop 7 the iPhone, a title that took more of my commuting (and toilet) time than I would care to admit. But it really became worrying when I was choosing to play that over my PS3 and 360. Canabalt, again on iPhone should also be mentioned. A simple platformer with a one-touch interface that proved endlessly entertaining especially as updates arrived, slowly adding new twists to the simple formula. Lastly there are Trials HD on XBLA (which kept me entertained for more hours than banging my head against a brick wall theoretically should) and Pixeljunk Shooter on PSN (that arrived to lick my bleeding forehead).

Trials HD, the gaming equivalent of having your junk trapped in an elevator door.

Trials HD, the gaming equivalent of having your junk trapped in an elevator door.

‘Big games’ that didn’t make my cut has the best licence game of the year, Batman Arkham Asylum narrowly missing the five spot. Its fantastic use of the licence and mind-blowing Scarecrow sections were only slightly marred by its weak ending. Earlier in the year I was loving Street Fighter 4, a nostalgia endued two week coma followed, which could well have taken over the year had I had more local opponents to play with. Mad World for Wii was an incredible and entertaining little brawler that slipped in to wean me of my Street Fighter addiction. It brought some more content to Nintendo’s family machine, but never received the sales it deserved. The summer drought was more muted this year that in the past, but it was still there which gave InFamous a chance to shine as I played it to completion twice, thanks to its variety of missions making it constantly entertaining.

But enough of the preamble and games that didn’t make the grade, what did rise above the other flotsam in 2009? It is a somewhat fluid list, in that ask me tomorrow and it may be slightly different but these five (plus maybe Batman and InFamous) are the games that year have stood above all of their competitors’. So ignore the numbers and just take my word for the fact these are game you owe it to yourself to at least try.

5 – Resident Evil 5 (Multi)

Any who talked to me while I was playing RE5 would have heard me complain about indefinable flaws I found in the game. How it wasn’t scary, or a horror game and how it didn’t ‘feel’ like Resident Evil. I stand by those comments, for me it wasn’t as good as the original game or Resident Evil 4, but when those stand as two of the games dearest to my heart that isn’t as damning as it may sound. Resident Evil 5 kept me coming back for months. I earned every achievement, unlocked every… unlockable… and finished the game some seven or eight times.

Yes, characters still controlled like a tanks, but that is Resident Evil, there are only so many changes you can make before you should really just do something else (which for the record I hope they do now). Despite this the game remained fun with just the right mix of hammy acting to keep it entertainingly bad without being horrible. Combine this with the ability to dip in and out of stages at will and it kept me coming back for both solo and co-op play long after I would usually have put it back on the shelf.

My Chris what absolutely colossal arms you have.

My Chris what absolutely colossal arms you have.

4 – The Path (PC/Mac)

Beautiful, evocative and magical, you would be forgiven for never having heard of this (primarily) downloadable PC/Mac title. Taking inspiration from Little Red Riding Hood the game allows you to control one of seven girls on their adventurer to grandma’s house. There is little for the player to do but direct their girl on their journey to the house (or off into the forest), but left alone near items in the world they will interact and their story and personality.

Defiantly a more relaxed, almost passive, experience compared to most games it is really only for a select group who have an interested in narrative and expression in games. Those that fit this bill will find a Grimm Fairy Tale experience unlike any other title on the market.

On of seven Little Red Riding Hoods, heavier on the 'Red' than the 'Hood'.

On of seven Little Red Riding Hoods, heavier on the 'Red' than the 'Hood'.

3 – Uncharted 2 (PS3)

It is an over used expression but describing Uncharted 2 as cinematic is the only way I know to accurately describe it’s presentation. Some of the most breathtaking graphics and voice work yet seen on a home console combine with set pieces that would not be out of place in an Indian Jones movie to create an experience which is almost as fun to watch as it is to play.

Entertaining start to finish (and with a good multiplayer if you are so inclined) it no sits as a game that I will keep to revisit in the future in the same way I would a movie. It isn’t about the gameplay, which is the same rinse and repeat formula almost though out (bar the stunning train level), it is about the Christmas afternoon action movie. The film I used to watch as a kid that I now own on DVD and keep on a shelf, just to give me a warm fuzzy feeling when I look at it.

Drake looking intense. I don't remember why exactly.

Drake looking intense. I don't remember why exactly.

2 – Dragon Age: Origins (PC)

Released the latest of my top five Dragon Age Origins has the advantage of being the freshest in my mind, but having pumped neigh on forty hours into the game in the last three weeks I can declare this one of the best of the year. It isn’t pretty, the game went into development some time ago and the engine seems to have only undergone some mild tweaks since it began. Its lack of visual pizzazz however is more than made up for by hours of unique dialogue delivered by its superb cast. It sucks you in, constantly surprising you with incidental dialogue from both your own party and those around you as you walk through the world making it feel alive.

The incredible thing for me was how it managed to engage me in the minutia rather than the grand story. You quickly find yourself living for your party, the group you collect from various miscreants you meet on your travels. Each reacts differently, and not always predictably, to your choices. A positive act to one will repulse another and you find yourself trying to tailor your answers to appeal to a favoured party member. It is basically the ‘paragon’ and ‘renegade’ options from developer Bioware’s other big title Mass Effect, but applied on an individual level. More than any overarching morality system could this granular system judgment by individuals highlights the uncertainty of choices, how the game offers no right or wrong, just choices on your quest for a greater good.

My dog, I called him Flopsy.

My dog, I called him Flopsy.

1 – Demon’s Souls (PS3)

Number one spot (today at least) goes to Demon’s Souls. A PS3 exclusive that has managed to constantly draw me back in. Set in a desolate world, devoid of any real life it is cold and lonely. Despite this it has beauty, not only in the graphic fidelity but also in the design. It is grand and somehow tranquillity when you are not besieged by the soulless abominations that lurk behind every corner. It is an environment I may never want to go there on holiday to but it perfectly fits the fantasy medieval setting.

It is a game that is usually challenging, often punishing and at times seemingly impossible. Progress is slow, but rewarding and even at its most devious you feel like you can make progress, if you just grind a little harder. Of course if you are in need of help there is the interesting online component. Uniquely Japanese in its implementation it allows you to be constantly sharing your world, without every really having to share the experience. In the game you spend most of your time a spirit, but when you resurrect you are able to summon other spirits in to your world to help. Despite this there is no voice, no communication beyond a boilerplate set of comments that you can leave scattered on the ground. It’s co-operative, intelligent but ultimately just serves to make you feel more alone.

Not a game for everyone, but a game for me, and it stands as one of the few games this year that is continually on my mind and will keep me coming back well into 2010.

He looks tired for a reason.

He looks tired for a reason.

That’s it I guess. I am already remembering games I have forgotten, games like PSN’s Shatter, but if I didn’t remember them then I guess they don’t really count right? Either that or I could just keep adding to this for the rest of 2010 in the hope of suddenly finding some ‘right’ answer to the question “What was your favourite game this year?” The truth is though, I don’t think that epiphany would ever come, because there are just so many good games. There are so many in fact that I can honestly say if I stopped buying games right now it would easily be 2011 before I cleared my backlog. Guess I won’t be doing that though so here is to a costly year of 2010 gaming, kicking off for me at the end of January with Mass Effect 2.

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Tags: 2009, 360, Batman: Arkham Asylum, Canabalt, Demon's Souls, Dragon Age Origins, Drop 7, inFamous, iPhone, Mac, Mad World, Mass Effect 2, PC, Pixeljunk Shooter, PS3, Resident Evil 5, Shatter, Street Fighter 4, The Path, Trials HD, Uncharted 2
Posted in game opinion No Comments »

Mad World (Wii)

Thursday, May 7th, 2009

Boss fights and bonus rounds offer much needed variety to the game play.

Boss fights and bonus rounds offer much needed variety to the game play.

With Nintendo and most third party publishers focusing their sites on the ‘casual’ market few have tried targeting the more serious gaming audience on Wii. With the comparative failure of such titles and their high development costs who can blame publishers from being a little wary about venturing into this niche market on the little white system? Sega has thrown caution to the wind however with their latest offerings.

Foremost amongst is Platinum Games (formerly Clover Studios) developed Mad World. Superficially it seems like everything the traditional gaming crowd has been demanding. A (primarily) black and white colour palette gives a stylish Frank Miller graphic novel vibe to the experience and a lavish splattering of blood and gore (I said primarily black and white) ensured it received a rating of ‘M’ for mature (which is the last thing I would label it). It is a visually arresting style and while in dire need of some anti-aliasing it manages to dodge most of the Wii technical limitations and function far better in motion than stills suggest.

And there’s blood.

And there’s blood.

To ensure your ears don’t feel left out of the offensive fun, Greg Proops and John DiMaggio provide fantastically obscene comedy over a Rock sound track. The pair were evidently given full licence to make their roles as profane as they could manage, references to everything you would expect to rattle a classifications board are all present and for the most part extremely funny the first, second and third time you hear them. After that even the foulest remarks do tend to become a bit over familiar. I honestly never thought anal sex would be something a game would desensitise me to, but this may well have done.

Its outer appearance masks a simple old fashioned fighting game, updated for the 3D generation with a few waggle controls added for the Wii. You move through stylised levels, which for the most part merely amount to new skins over a single blood soaked skeleton, forcing you to repeat the same few mundane actions until you reach a stage’s unique bonus stage or boss fight. While Mad World’s intermissions are certainly more diverse than its forefathers the one hook that used to keep me enthralled is sorely lacking, co-op. This is a game that should be enjoyed and at laughed with friends, but when your friends can only sit and drink beer while watching the mayhem it loses something that used to make me replay Streets of Rage over and over again.

The black and white aesthetic is far clearer in motion.

The black and white aesthetic is far clearer in motion.

I concede that I may have played this game ‘wrong’. Not to say that there is really a ‘right’ way to play any game, but most ‘hardcore’ games these days lend themselves to a more involved experience which cultivates hours of continuous play. Mad World is more akin to an arcade game. Something to be enjoyed in small chunks, not delivered as a single narrative. The story is hackneyed and essentially pointless with a futuristic blood sport being the only explanation for anything that’s going on. As such the repetitive game play is left holding the baton. Which it does; up to a point. The enemies and death machines may all behave in the same way but faux variety offered by altered outer facades is enough to keep it entertaining, if not experienced in rapid succession. When played in short bursts it proves truly refreshing from longer narrative centric games. It is a casual game for hardcore players who don’t like Peggle but want something to relax with after a hard evening of Call of Duty.

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Tags: Mad World, Platinum Games, Sega, Wii
Posted in game opinion 3 Comments »

The DoFuss Podcast – Aimlessly Wandering

Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

Like my art home work back at high school just getting this one in just in time. After the last rather light podcast we have hit back with a content packed but somewhat undirected episode. So a full month of gaming and news fill the majority of the show.

Darren takes on the iPhone discussion, yet some how manages to keep it retro with Pole Position and Wonder Boy. I try to keep things more current we head back to Resident Evil 5 and rub on a little Madworld. Then we avoid talking about the Watchmen.

News is sprinkled through out. We touch on a number of topics that have been affecting gaming in the UK recently. Then we bitch about Nintendo. Because they deserve it sometimes. We wrap up with the usual Darren’s old games with is a breathless summation of the wonderful Sensible Software.

 
icon for podpress  The DoFuss Podcast [63:04m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
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Tags: iPhone, Mad World, Nintendo, Racism, Resident Evil, Sensible Software, UK, Watchmen
Posted in News, Podcast, culture, game 5 Comments »

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