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Tycho

League of Legends is still a thing, that rare creature whose appeal slices through so many distinct strata that it can build consensus even in our fractious crew.

We’ve played against bots for ages, which is like riding a bike with training wheels on while your father also steadies the banana seat with his hand.  For the most part we’ve been content with that.  I also think there’s tons of headroom in the design for a more robust co-op thingamajig, but that’s neither here nor there.  The main thing is that the enemy selection is curtailed from the full roster, and the A.I. has distinctive quirks that you recognize and accept, like those of an old friend.

I was disconnected from a game once, some driver thing, and when I reconnected somehow live players had entered the game opposite me.  It would be hard to contain this horror with language alone, its heinous violence, its juxtapositions; it was as though the Omaha Beach landing had crashed through a faerie picnic.

We won a game last night, after we made the strip of course.  I don’t think it’s a trend.

In my ongoing effort to enjoy/understand the Nintendo 3DS, I grabbed a copy of The Mercenaries.  Resident Evil fans know all about The Mercenaries, it’s the unlockable reward you get when you win, something like a trophy you can play.  It survives the transition to the handheld pretty well all things considered, but there’s simply not enough game here to warrant a purchase.  The value it represents may be warped somewhat by the fact that it has generally been included with a marquee Resident Evil title, but that’s just my Peace Gland trying to secrete diplomacy when no diplomacy is actually warranted.  This would have been a legendary downloadable offering, something to try out on the new store.  As it stands, these simply aren’t the droids you’re looking for.  Or zombies, or whatever.

These attempts at life integration have solidified some of the concerns I have with the hardware, one being that Forty Dollars Is No Longer Curiosity Money.  They’ve pushed the price past what I’m willing to gamble on a portable title with this generation, making me more circumspect, and that’s sad.  The Mercenaries is, in this case, the First Bite in Great White’s Hierarchy Of Biting.  I was rewarded tons of times for my curiosity last time out, in a different world, where forty dollars couldn’t purchase - literally purchase - forty portable games.

On the DS, the game would almost certainly have Download Play - the ability to distribute a limited copy to a friend so you can play together.  The PSP could do this as well, though it rarely did, I imagine because (at least in part) the amount of data was too onerous for this kind of casual sharing.  Is that where we’re at now?  I can’t tell you how many games I sold people simply because they could try it.

There’s also the issue of hardware mutability.  What I mean by that is: the DS as a platform was more or less a pile of functions hooked together.  That’s what made it so difficult to predict, because from every angle it was a different machine.  This allowed for all kinds of bizarre things to happen, like Hotel Dusk, a game played entirely from a sideways orientation.  Well, the 3D doesn’t work from a sideways orientation.  And it only works from a very specific angle, so tilt controls - or even moving your body, like a human being does from time to time - ruins the effect.

The first wave of Kinect games couldn’t use the controller at all, which limited what was possible; that stricture is gone now, to the benefit of the next generation of software. “3D” on the “3DS” is almost certainly a requirement as it stands.  Will that always be the case?  Because - as a practical matter - they’ve made a markedly less versatile machine.

(CW)TB out.

all over god’s world

Tycho

It’s true: you can see for yourself!  Well, technically, it’s $112,099.73, but who’s counting?  Me.  I am counting.

An incredible showing over there.  Nice work, people.

(CW)TB 

Gabe

I’ve had a few people ask about the Alienware laptop in the strip. Some people want to know if I have one and if so, do I like it. A couple have even asked if I am getting some kind of payment for putting it in there. It’s probably worth mentioning that advertisers can not purchase space in the comic strip. That’s just not something we offer. The truth is I do have a couple Alienware machines and as far as my experience with them, it’s been sort of mixed.

I purchased an Alienware M17x laptop about a year ago because I knew eventually the Old Republic would be a real thing and I’d need something to play it on. That’s no joke, either. I remember seeing the game on the floor at PAX back in 2009 and thinking “holy shit I need a PC!”  I haven’t had a PC around for years and so there was a certain amount of novelty in setting up a Steam account and checking out what was available. Almost immediately I remembered why I had quit playing PC games.

The first game I tried was Rift which eventually ran decent but getting it to that point was a chore. I spent multiple nights searching forums and fiddling with drivers. Apparently my laptop has two video cards configured in a “crossfire” configuration but it was only actually seeing one of the cards. Eventually I got it working but I realized that once again I had not purchased a gaming machine, I had purchased a hobby.

Next I tried Brink which suffered from what people were calling “The Grid” making it unplayable. That bug got worked out but by that time I’d picked it up for my 360. I tried the Witcher 2 but it wouldn’t run in full screen. League of Legends has the same problem. I can play it in a window but if I switch to full screen I can only play one game before my machine freezes up. It has seriously been one frustration after another. I’ve had people tell me “that’s what you get for buying a machine with a Radeon in it.” or “You should have built the machine yourself.” These are nice thoughts but I’m not a computer guy. I don’t know any of this stuff. So I brought the machine in for Tycho to take a look at. He spent two days working on it and I’m still playing LOL in a window.

When it came time to get Kara a PC I did some homework. The new Alienware M14x got a lot of great reviews but I was hesitant about getting another Alienware. Eventually I gave in and I have to admit it’s an incredible laptop. Compared to my M17x from just one year ago it’s like Hal from the movie 2001. Honestly it’s like it wasn’t even made by the same fucking company. Her sleek little machine sports a much cooler design, it didn’t come bogged down with bullshit software like mine, and it plays every game she tries without a hitch. I guess it is indicative of their new line of machines. If that’s the case, I can highly recommend them.

Meanwhile, I’m sick of trying old versions of drivers or new versions or fucking experimental versions. I don’t want to edit command lines or create .cfg files full of custom tweaks. I just want to play games. I guess I just bought the wrong machine or bought it at the wrong time… or maybe both.

-Gabe out