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Showing posts from June, 2020

Mega Man 8

So, this week we are going to go on a bit of a detour. I wasnā€™t planning on covering Mega Man 8 this week, but on Fatherā€™s Day I asked my son what he wanted to do and he was like ā€œplay video games with daddy!ā€  I wasnā€™t going to tell him no.  I even told him he could pick the game.  He went right to ā€œEternal Darkness: Sanityā€™s Requiem,ā€ but when I informed him that that game was just slightly not appropriate for a 3-year old,  he happily picked Mega Man 8 as a second choice.  How fitting, starting his gaming career off with the same franchise I began mine with 25 years ago. By now just about everyone is familiar with Mega Man.  I have touched on some of its more unique games and some parts of the X series, but this is the first time we will jump into the original series.  Released in January of 1997, 8 is the only mainline series title for the Playstation 1 (it also came out on the Sega Saturn).  It would also be the last one we would see for a ...

Kagero: Deception 2

Kagero: Deception 2 For the first time, Iā€™m not entirely sure how I would classify the game Iā€™m about to review.  Itā€™s not uncommon to find titles that mix genres, even back to the early days of gaming.  Itā€™s a great way to keep stale formulas fresh and try new things.  But Iā€™m not entirely sure what genre Kagero fits into, or if it even fits into one at all.  Itā€™s part third person adventure, part strategy, part survival horror, part RPG and, dare I say, a little bit of a puzzle game.  A lot of games like this tend to become disjointed and incoherent, but that didnā€™t happen here.  Kagero is an outstanding game, but it comes with a major caveat. I am just going to get it out of the way, Kagero is a very violent and at times, very disturbing game.  It really, really earned its M rating.  As a PS1 game, the blood and gore arenā€™t really all that shocking.  In fact, the blocky character models and lacking details make the game much easier to st...

Shining Force

Itā€™s back to the Sega Genesis this week.  What can I say, I ignored it for too long, even in my younger years. Itā€™s no secret that the Super Nintendo was regarded as a haven for great RPGs while the Genesis was widely considered a wasteland for the genre.  But was that really the case?  The first part was certainly true.  There are dozens of really good to great RPGs for the SNES, especially if you include Super Famicom games.  But was it really that much better than the Genesisā€™ RPG library? Honestly, yes.  But that doesnā€™t mean the Genesis was the RPG wasteland it was made out to be.  It had a number of solid entries in the genre, mostly from its two main RPG seriesā€™.  I already discussed the amazing Phantasy Star IV, a game I never realized was as classic as it was.  That inspired me to look into Segaā€™s other oft discussed RPG series: Shining Force. Released in 1993, Shining Force was actually the second game in the series, a follow-...

The Golden Compass

Oh boy, I have been dreading this for a long time.  Itā€™s time to talk about one of the scourges of the gaming world: licensed movie tie-ins.   There was a point in time where you absolutely knew any game based on a movie was going to be complete trash.  Developers would slap together something as quickly as they could, throw on a label and flood store shelves with it.  These were almost universally shameless cash grabs designed to separate gamers, and their unassuming parents and relatives, from their hard earned money.  Fortunately, that has changed to a degree as quality control has become better.  But it still happens. First, a little bit about the source material for todayā€™s game.  In true ā€œStreet Fighter: The Movieā€ style, we have a video game thatā€™s based on a movie thatā€™s based on a book, the first in Phillip Pullmanā€™s ā€œHis Dark Materialsā€ series.  I remember reading the book when I was younger and thinking it...