Tuesday, June 28, 2011

new video card: GTX 460 2gb

My new card arrived today, an EVGA Nvidia GTX 460 2gb PCI-E 2.0 x16. For the first time in a long time, I am reasonably current; my CPU is also minus one from current.

I put it through its paces with my recent regulars, Starcraft 2 and TF2, and as expected it played well at max settings. Unexpectedly and happily it did this without the the fan changing noticeably; previously it sounded like it was preparing for liftoff.

Still, I felt only a hollow victory until I bought Fallout 3 GOTYE on Steam. I set everything to max, and once again, it plays flawlessly with hardly any fan spinup.

With a fairly current CPU and GPU, its clear now how much disk access is slowing things down. That's next on the hardware to-do list.

Monday, June 20, 2011

System Shock : watching the playthrough

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 04 - D`arcys Keycard"
However much I dislike the UI in the cyberspace part of the game, at least its something different than cliche of hunt for this floor's keycard.
Wait, the goal is to stop Shodan from pointing a laser at Earth, but aren't we orbiting Saturn? Maybe I missed something.
Shodan's zombie troops look like Borg; the Sparq weapon looks like a Star Trek TNG 'dustbuster' phaser.

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 05 - They are all Dead"
This game seems ridiculously ahead of its time, but also ridiculously overloaded with attempts to try everything.
I wish they were a little less ambitious with the technology, and worked a little harder on a clean UI (and finding voice talent).

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 06 - Lost Hope"

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 07 - Out of Order"
Shodan's voice message seems out of character; not enough wacky AI, a little too much boastful James Bond villain.

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 08 - Ready to die?"
All this advanced gameplay, and they still kept the exploding barrels.
Cliche elevator muzak while you are in dire straits? Truly, this game predates everything in gaming for the next 15 years.

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 09 - Dead people everywhere"

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 10 - EMP Shock"

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 11 - Dreams of a Artificial Intelligence"
SHODAN-05.NOV.72
Weird and wonderful cut scene with more James Bond villain thinking out loud from Shodan. There, for just a second, a monster that looks like the big daddy from Bioshock!? This feels like archaeology or something.
Wait, is that a System Shock 2 logo? I hope the playthrough maker isn't fucking around.
That cut scene ends feeling like a concept art slideshow, with random fanfic dropped in.
OK, checking the video on Youtube, commentary reveals the playthrough maker was indeed taking some artistic license, and dropped in the video. I hate lies and revisionist history, and now I can't trust this playthrough as a historical document anymore. Fucking great.

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 12 - Cyberspace Disco"

"Joey's System Shock Commentary_ Part 13 - Dead for the first time"

Friday, June 17, 2011

System Shock, another attempt to reconnect.

I watched a few videos, then drifted away. Guess I got bored. After all, its just watching videos, not really gaming.
Months passed.
My video card burnt out - no more 3d games for a while. What a good reminder to get back to basics. There was a point to all this. Play, or at least experience as much as possible, System Shock, then play the sequel, then finally Bioshock.

It looks like I had last decided on using this playthrough; might as well start over:
"Joey's System Shock Commentary: Part 1 - Incident on Citadel Station"
[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-5sPhZOJtk]

From here on, there be SPOILERS.

Thoughts while watching:

The opening music (all of six seconds) is just amazing at establishing the tone and environment. It sounds like something soaring towards you from a great distance, it sounds something materializing into existence, it sounds like coming awake from a dream, its sounds like you're about to realize something, and this is all just the first four seconds. Then there are a few short but ominous base tones and a few high notes - whatever was coming, its here now, and its cold and its inscrutable, and things are going to different now, and probably not for the better.

The intro video is surprisingly good, a decade and a half later, and unsurprisingly dated. In the future there will be flying cars, of course, and the whole planet will look like Bladerunner. We will have space stations far out into the solar system. Cutting edge hackers will have 3d holo cube screens, but still use green-screen text to breach systems (OK, this part actually makes sense). It all wraps up beautifully as you realize who your narrator is. Even avoiding spoilers, its hard to get this far in gaming and on the net and not know who your enemy is, the AI Shodan. What a great little video; probably one of the best game intros I've ever seen.

Our playthrough player begins to set up his game, and his voice-over indicates that he will be playing through in character - uh oh, not a good sign. But as long as he is thorough and gets the game across, I can put up with it.

The in game voice acting is OK for its time but not really acceptable by current standards. It's hardly a showstopper, though. Heck, Deus Ex had some real bombs, but it couldn't drag a good game down.

OK, the player is at least taking time to show the text messages, so far so good. And its high enough res that I can pause and read them.

More awful in game voice acting, ouch. At least Shodan's voice is respectable (but being an insane AI gives you more leeway). When you're voice acting a desperate security guard who knows they're probably leaving their final voice message to whoever finds it, you shouldn't sound like you're ordering pizza.

It is remarkable that this game (1994) is only a year older than Doom (1993), but it has so many more bells and whistles on it. Even Doom 2 (1994) wasn't nearly as complex. However, from this distant perspective, I'm guessing the Doom games gave a better overall experience, at least as far as UI, if not gameplay. I can still somewhat remember how different the weapons felt in Doom 2, as if they each had their own personality; from what little I played of SS everything feels like it is being handled through thick gloves, and so everything feels the same.

Also, System Shock seems to have as many UI controls as an airplane, and you haven't been to pilot school yet. I can see how this eventually evolved into the similarly clunky UI of Deus Ex (2000). But that's OK, it had evolved by then, and I got used to it. It also helped a lot that Deus Ex has a tutorial to ease you in, and even the first few levels introduce you into gameplay. Hopefully I will find System Shock 2 (1999) to be playable; I don't want to have to watch a playthrough of that too.

"Joey's System Shock Commentary: Part 2 - Found the crew"
The player is talking over the in game voice messages.
Interesting little puzzle game as you re-wire a stuck door.
Wow, you can switch on lights, and climb ladders. I remember in Doom where even a one inch high obstruction meant you had to find a way around.

Player says he will swap out some of the original music for remixes. I'd rather all things be left as original as possible; I can still nostalgia over midi soundtracks.

"Joey's System Shock Commentary: Part 3 - Cyberspace Violation"
A visualization of cyberspace, as imagined from the days when we perceived some need to see it visualized. Besides being quaint, it was the final straw as to why I could no longer play this game myself, and went for the playthrough. It plays like you're a brick floating through a Vaseline filled maze of ductwork, attempting to catch some glowing and/or blinking objects, while avoiding some other glowing and/or blinking objects. I'm all for climbing up a learning curve for a rewarding experience, but this is too much.

Age of Empires II (2013)

2024.01.15 Age of Empires II: Definitive Edition came out in 2019. Age of Empires II: HD Edition came out in 2013. I'm playing the older...