Recipe for gaming nirvana – Everyday Shooter

Ingredients:

  • 1 or more gamers raised on old school 80’s twitch arcade games
  • 1 Playstation 3
  • 1 2 stick/8 way shooter incorporating awesome guitar rock soundtrack cleverly integrated into the gameplay, 8 bit generation inspired but modern sensibility informed graphics, and novel scoring mechanic.

Download game from psn store, and play, play, play. Details:

(translation: Everyday Shooter is absolutely fantastic. I’ve gotten more mileage out of 8 way shooters on my PS3 than any other form of entertainment on the thing. $9.99, and no one who has a PS3 should pass this up. Even if you don’t have a ps3, watch the video. Road trips to my house will follow.)

Free halflife 2 to he who speaks first

Halflife 2 is a classic first person shooter – witness the reviews on metacritic and gamerankings.com by way of example. Valve’s recent release of episode 2 for halflife 2 was only available as part of a bundle that also included the original halflife 2 and episode 1 expansion pak for it. This was kind of stupid for a lot of folks including me, since we already owned these, but Valve’s made it possible to ‘gift’ these licenses to someone else. So. If you want a free copy of halflife 2 and the first expansion pak, speak up in the comments. This is PC only. The hardware requirements are relatively modest since Halflife 2 is several years old now, though if you’ve got a recent machine it still looks great because they’ve been continually improving the engine.

Parting out my media box

Back in July of 2003 I turned on my media box, and it’s served me well since then, happily running the excellent Snapstream, recording shows for me, and playing back stuff I grabbed off the web. But recently I subscribed to Directv, and I got an HD DVR as part of the subscription. I decided to go that route rather than invest in the hardware I would need to record HD video, and besides, I’d rather get windows out of my living room. I’m planning on getting a dedicated video playback device to handle downloaded videos, something like this or this.

The end result is I’m going to part out this box, selling off what I can on ebay. This is the model I have, which got great reviews at the time. It’s been running 24×7 for years now and I’ve been nervous about the fans and power supply for a while now, but all has continued to work fine. If anyone’s interested, speak up. It’s got a gig of ram in it, whatever the last Athlon XP I had, a Hauppauge mpeg hardware video encoder card, an old Nvidia 5200 class video card, and that’s about it. I’m keeping the DVD burner and hard drive. I’ll let all this go for cheap, make me an offer in the comments if you want it. Speak quick because by this weekend I’ll probably have parts of it up on ebay – I want to take the money from the parts and buy one of the media boxes listed above.

The ‘original’ pen and paper RPG gets updated and goes…online?!?

Yeah, so Dungeons and Dragons 4th edition was announced this spring, which is interesting in and of itself, I suppose, if you’re still playing pen and paper RPGs, but what’s more interesting is the whispers of online functionality, gaming portals, subscriptions services and more that have been swirling about since the spring. I hadn’t been paying much attention, but today I noticed this video showing some of the functionality of their new services (~5 minute youtube video below – fast forward about a minute and a half to see the online stuff):

Color me intrigued. Details are still scanty, but a toolset that takes care of modeling the mechanics of combat, in 3d? Awesome! I don’t know who I’d actually be able to play with, but my love of tactical combat knows no bounds. There are other toolsets out there for the pen and paper rpg crowd, but nothing I’m aware of comes close to this in terms of presentation, and presumably it will be populated with the complete catalog of DnD material, something no other toolset has or can come close to. Supposedly this stuff is going to be available in spring of ’08. I’ll be watching to see how it plays out.[via]

Friday fun – Chalk, innovative action game

So you’re a little girl in a dress.. no, don’t bail, stay with me here. You’re a little girl in a dress flying through an undefined space, assaulted on all sides by geometric shapes. The good news is you can fend off the assault by drawing lines through things with the stick of chalk you’re armed with, using your mouse to draw.

If that premise doesn’t grab you (and honestly, who could resist it?) I’ll also note that Chalk is fun, cute, and clever both in premise and gameplay mechanic implementation. This is windows only,

Pardon me, but your website casts aspersions on my testicles

Please make it stop!

That’s your laugh of the day, courtesy of an email sent to me at work where I monitor the webmaster@ email address. It was from a former student who’s just about to finish grad school, is hunting for a job, and discovered that the number 1 result in a certain famous search engine when searching for his name was an article published by a student run publication as part of an April fools issue that satirized steroid munching student athletes and the effects on their testicle size. While I feel for the guy, I also couldn’t help getting a laugh out of it.

Soolin gets another hotspot

So one downside to the hike to Mount Colden – Soolin ended up with some injuries. Basically the harness she was wearing, which I used to haul her up and down all sorts of impediments – steep grades, ladders, boulders, etc – caused chafing under her arms and on one of her shoulders. Most of these are healing up nicely, but the one on her shoulder flared up into a hotspot by late last week and I ended up having to shave her shoulder. It didn’t help that I didn’t notice it at first – initially I thought she had pine sap or something stuck in her fur, and it was a couple of days after I first noticed it that I realized it was actually her wound seeping into her fur that was causing the sticky patch. Doh! Anyway, she’s healing up now. Here’s a pic to illustrate, and there’s a closeup at the end of the Colden Gallery linked in the post previous to this one if you’re a dog owner and curious about these things.

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Hiking Mount Colden

Last weekend I hiked Mount Colden, in the High Peaks region of the Adirondacks, just south of Lake Placid. I finally got a chance to post all the photos online, which you can checkout here:

http://www.metamusing.net/gallery/v/other-adirondak-hikes/mount_colden/

A few samples of my favorite images from the trip to encourage folks to click the link:

Soolin and I at Marcy Dam:

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A view from the summit of Mount Colden

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Hiking mountains can wear a dog out

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Giving my life over to Halo

I’d planned to buy an Xbox 360 since the day they were announced – in fact I planned to buy all three of the new consoles, just as I did last generation, but the 360’s continued hardware troubles delayed my purchase well past when I initially thought I would get one. They recently applied at least a partial fix to their issues, so I decided to buy one to coincide with the Halo 3 launch.

Although I thought the original Halo was only average, I had a fantastic time playing through it coop with my buddy Nick on the original Xbox, and we made our way about halfway through Halo 2 playing coop a couple of years later which was also fun.

I never solved Halo 2 because of the premature death of my original Xbox (you can see where my hesitations about buying another MS box comes from), and I had sold off Halo 2, so I bought the 360, a new copy of Halo 2, and pre-ordered Halo 3. I played my way through both games over the last couple of weeks, finishing up Halo 3 last night.

Overall my opinion remains largely the same – Halo is an average FPS with well above average music and audio, well crafted combat mechanics, and level design that ranges from good to awful across the three games. The overarching plot is great in a comic book sort of way, and the guy from Marathon….err, I mean Master Chief, is a great protagonist. Oh, and Halo does do a great job of giving things an epic feel. Riding up a giant space elevator inside a space station that feels like it’s the size of the moon while your buddies follow along after you in a spaceship bigger than a 747 is some cool, cool stuff. Sure, the ‘elevator’ may only be made up of 17 polygons and textured with what could generously be called ‘engraved concrete with glowies,’ and the bad guys may be popping out onto the elevator out of monster closets, but it’s still some cool shit.

I haven’t played much multiplayer yet, but what I have played has reinforced my tendency towards playing online on PC. I can routinely come in the top 5 across a spectrum of FPS on PC, from the Battlefield series of games to the recently released Team Fortress 2, yet in Halo online I rarely come in better than dead last. It’s humiliating and reinforces my tendencies (which I’m trying to overcome) to not play console FPS.

In terms of Halo 3 specifically: it’s been criticized for being too short and for not being true HD graphically. I don’t agree with either criticism. Maybe it’s because I played 2 and 3 back to back, but I thought 3 was just the right length, I thought it brought a satisfactory conclusion to the plot, and I thought the graphics were great, especially the lighting. I don’t care much what the nerds who bothered to count the pixels say, at the end of the day it looks great.

I’ll write more about the 360 as time permits. A short comparison to the PS3 would look something like ‘360 hardware feels cheap compared to PS3, and the PS3 interface is world’s better (I mean really – 360 interface reminds me of a gaudy flea market – ads all over the place and garish oranges and greens, plus things scattered all over the place in a non intuitive way – where did that game just go that I downloaded?), but in the end it’s about the games, and the 360 wins in a major way at that – Halo 3, Dead Rising, Project Gotham 3, and Crackdown, all besides Halo purchased for under $20, and all great fun.

(one last technical note – 360 emulation which allows you to run old xbox games on it is weak. I had constant frame rate problems playing Halo 2 on it, and a terrible graphical glitch which would cause background imagery to superimpose itself on the screen and stay stuck there. I managed to finish the game but there were times I got sick of restarting the thing to get rid of the gameplay obscuring graphical glitches. It was a near thing, whether I finished it or not).

A brief taste of the Mount Colden hike

Still too busy to get to posting the pictures, but I did work a bit on the software running this site and want to test it out, so here’s a sample of the photos we took this weekend. These were taken by Andrew, and show off how stunning some of the areas we hiked through were. This is Avalanche Pass, looking roughly northwards down Avalanche Lake and then southwards back the way we had come. We’re about 4-5 miles from the trailhead here.

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