I just started Gurumin. It's very charming in an "Ys meets Peanuts" way. Controls are really weird though -- not sure if high skill gate or just wonky. It's definitely designed for a dual-stick, and I'm not sure what the hell they were thinking with the default keyboard scheme. Also there's some kind of wall-run but it...may not be fully implemented? I dunno.
No idea what the difficulty looks like. Only Normal and below are available at first, and apparently there are three difficulties past it.
Normal is relatively easy especially compared to the Ys games, until you get to the fourth boss I think. Bonus boss kicks ass.
The game is a little tedious, but in retrospect, overall, being able to meet that bonus boss in battle made everything worth it.
The biggest mistake Davey Wreden made with The Beginner's Guide is leaving even the vague impression it was real, because somehow people insist on treating it as real, despite it being an obvious fictional narrative, and actually believe the Stanley Parable guy published a bunch of someone else's games without their permission for money.
The biggest mistake Davey Wreden made with The Beginner's Guide is leaving even the vague impression it was real, because somehow people insist on treating it as real, despite it being an obvious fictional narrative, and actually believe the Stanley Parable guy published a bunch of someone else's games without their permission for money.
I wonder if these people also get angry about Nabokov putting his name on a poem by John Shade and a commentary thereof by Charles Kinbote
The biggest mistake Davey Wreden made with The Beginner's Guide is leaving even the vague impression it was real, because somehow people insist on treating it as real, despite it being an obvious fictional narrative, and actually believe the Stanley Parable guy published a bunch of someone else's games without their permission for money.
I think it's a masterstroke, because it proves those people are like his fictional persona, who needs to see objective truth in media.
The biggest mistake Davey Wreden made with The Beginner's Guide is leaving even the vague impression it was real, because somehow people insist on treating it as real, despite it being an obvious fictional narrative, and actually believe the Stanley Parable guy published a bunch of someone else's games without their permission for money.
I played like three hours of Sunless Sea last night and it felt like six. Which is good. My first captain died being chased by an iceberg.
I wonder if you can take the daughters of Salt, Stone, or Storm as sweethearts.
...ohh, is that what they are? that explains things. sort of. kind of. not really. well, that's fallen london for you.
I suggest trying the veteran's past for your first few shots, especially if you're after your father's bones. Iron is useful and the free officer won't be surpassed until you travel far or gain wealth
Also, don't buy a new ship until you get up to 3000 Echoes; you will be hunting something huge at some point, and you'll want something with a forward weapon and a tough hull when it gets to it. Oh, the things I've pulled off with a Corvette...
The biggest mistake Davey Wreden made with The Beginner's Guide is leaving even the vague impression it was real, because somehow people insist on treating it as real, despite it being an obvious fictional narrative, and actually believe the Stanley Parable guy published a bunch of someone else's games without their permission for money.
well
duh?
idk why you'd think that though, unless you never played to the end and so missed the story
The biggest mistake Davey Wreden made with The Beginner's Guide is leaving even the vague impression it was real, because somehow people insist on treating it as real, despite it being an obvious fictional narrative, and actually believe the Stanley Parable guy published a bunch of someone else's games without their permission for money.
well
duh?
idk why you'd think that though, unless you never played to the end and so missed the story
also like "Coda" is an obvious pun
yeah but
people take lots of things at face value and lots of folks just straight up don't like Davey Wreden.
It's actually a "lifeburg"? It says so in the loading screen.
And yeah, I've gone with Veteran for now. I shot a bat, and that pissed off the god Salt? And now my sweetheart and her adopted son are dead.
I still don't know what "Coda" means.
Never piss off the sea gods. They are mercurial as all get out.
And yeah, lifebergs. Living icebergs. As in, when you defeat them, they bleed. I have no idea what's up with them either, lore-wise, but they're easy pickings if you can keep your distance and have hull points to spare.
So far I am very much enjoying this LP of Oxenfree (I'd buy it except money and I am impatient): It has a pretty neat and comfortable style that reminds me of William Gibbons except thicker, good voice work, is an adventure game with a pleasing UI, and the music doesn't seem half-bad either. Also it has a pleasant name, "Oxenfree," it rolls off the tongue so pleasantly.
A dream last night made me realize I want a game with the depth of Fallout or Mass Effect, but the aesthetics of Animal Crossing or Steven Universe or something. Basically just a really feel-good WRPG.
...hell, Chris Avellone's take on Steven Universe would be something to see. Rose Quartz Puzzlewell.
I just realized the reason you take damage while swimming in Gurumin isn't because there's anything wrong with the water, but because it hurts Parin's eyes unless she's wearing completely airtight goggles. :3
I wish the camera didn't suck ass while swimming though. There are a few places where there are underwater passages, but they're impossible to see because the camera never goes under to follow you.
I just realized the reason you take damage while swimming in Gurumin isn't because there's anything wrong with the water, but because it hurts Parin's eyes unless she's wearing completely airtight goggles. :3
I wish the camera didn't suck ass while swimming though. There are a few places where there are underwater passages, but they're impossible to see because the camera never goes under to follow you.
Agreed on the camera thing.
And suddenly I realize that your explanation makes sense.
She rescues a big rock guy, and is so pissed off afterward that she drills him in the jumblies for lulz. And then when a shapeshifter impersonating her rolls through town, she tries to exploit his traumatized state to pass off blame for said jumblies drilling.
Comments
The game is a little tedious, but in retrospect, overall, being able to meet that bonus boss in battle made everything worth it.
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
also like "Coda" is an obvious pun
it also sounds a lot like 'coder'
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Capsized
$9.99 $1.99
Dreaming Sarah
$5.99 $0.59
Finding Teddy
$6.99 $1.39
Hammerwatch
$9.99 $1.49
Shelter
$9.99 $1.99
Banished
$19.99 $4.99
Apotheon
$14.99 $3.74
Any comments on these?
i should tell Lee to pick up the one that IJBM uses
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
It's why I rarely read webcomics in binges anymore, and why I don't like using those manga sites.
Geeeeeetttt dunked on, Garuda.
And suddenly I realize that your explanation makes sense.
If anything, it needs more violence.
point
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
*This is a factual statement and not offensive
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead