Friday, February 13, 2009

Blue. All is blue.

Blue Lacuna is something else. Something other. I have some trouble classifying it. It's not exactly a game. It's not quite a novel. It is, however, a beautiful piece of art; a painting made of words using the pallet of free will.

In the vein of a well written choose-your-own-adventure novel, Blue Lacuna is a vast worldscape. It is a story of a discovery, both of the world and of the self.

Most of all, it is your story. Be you man or woman and choose you the path of love, art, duty, or something in between, Blue Lacuna will become your world. If you're up for a fantastic story, head over to www.lacunastory.com and download Aaron Reed's first novel of interactive fiction. You won't be disappointed.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Crayon Physics Deluxe!


Crayon Physics Deluxe from Petri Purho on Vimeo.

It's finally here! Crayon Physics has been one of the coolest concepts over the past few years and the full version of the game is finally ready! Download the demo to try it out. At $19.99, the full version is worth every penny. Crayon Physics won this past year's IGF grand prize, so you know that it has to be fabulous! Yay for creative games!

Check out the Crayon Physics site here.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Auditorium!

A beautifully crafted puzzle game with a focus on music! What more could I ask for?

Cypher Prime, the developing studio, is due to release the full version of the game at the end of the month. For now, head on over to their beautiful new blog (complete with cool webtoy at the top of the page) and try out this fabulous game!

Play Auditorium

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Passage

Everyone is born and everyone dies.

Passage is more of an exploration of the human condition than a fun diversion. It's got a very somber feel to it and it's Sega Master System graphics only amplify that. The long, thin screen represents your lifeline. As you wander through your life, you find treasure chests that represent accomplishments you've made. You can find friends or even a mate along the way. Once you're paired up, however, you'll be blocked from accessing some of the treasures only a single person could reach, but every step along the way is more rewarding.

As you progress through your life, the bars of compressed color that represent possibility unfold before you and memories are made behind you. Eventually, you being to age, slow down and die. The possibilities fade and diminish and are replaced with a lifetime of memories piled behind you. The questions then begin. Was my life fulfilling? Did I make the right choice to go after that one chest, wasting precious time in the process? Did it behoove me to marry when I did or should I have waited?

All in all, Passage makes you feel a bit unsettled, but in the best way possible. Try it out and make the best of your little, digital life. Try It!

Friday, October 31, 2008

Love for Love

Concept! Design! An MMO!
What more could I ask for? Though Love is still in its development stages, it sounds fantastic. This one's definitely staying on my radar. Follow the news from this one-man development team at Quel Solaar. On a side note, I love the idea of a one man team. Hmmm.... Time to go register a new gmail name!

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Grid Wars 2

I don't know if I've made it quite clear yet; when I'm not playing an RPGs or strategy games, I'm usually playing a shooter. No, I'm not talking about the twitchy, blood-and-gore shooters like Quake and Halo.

No, no, no.

I'm talking about good old "fly around in your 2d spaceship or spaceship-analogue and blow stuff up" type shooter. My two favorite games for the classic Turbo Grafx are Blazing Lasers and Lords of Thunder. Like my tastes in RPGs, shooters have to be something special. Grid Wars is special.

One of the many Geometry Wars clones out there, Grid Wars is the best of the best. The crème de la crème. The platonic ideal of a 2d shooter. Geometry Wars Galaxies is out for the Wii right now. I want it. I will have it. But until then, Grid Wars will do just fine.

If you're in the market for a shiny, sparkly, blowy-upy experience, you can download the game by clicking the link on the right, courtesy of the World of Stuart . And don't blame me if next week, after dreaming every night of pink, swirly stars and horribly evasive green cubes, you find yourself unable to resist picking up a copy of Geometry Wars Galaxies for the Wii.

Polychromatic Funkmonkey

An interesting diversion that quickly got me hooked, PCFM is a puzzle/platformer of unending possibilities. The world in this platformer is randomly generated every time you start a new game, so each playthrough is a different experience.

In the words of Farbs, the game's creator, Polychromatic Funkmonkey is "a tile based platforming game about building maps for tile based platforming games." The gist of the game is that you have to pick up the multicolored pieces of platforms that you walk on and place them in creative ways that allow you to reach the next “telefunkter”. Each telefunkter allows you to carry more blocks as well as teleport back to that particular point. The goal of the game is to touch each telefunkter in the randomly-generated, rainbow-colored, funky-sounding world. It’s great fun. Try it out!

Barkley Shut up and Jam, Gaiden

"Um... The hell, you say..."

That's pretty much the reaction I have each time the "Chaos Dunk" or "b-ball catacombs" are mentioned in this completely atypical RPG. Made in the style of Chrono Trigger, this homage to a Sega Genesis sports game is, to put it bluntly, bizarre.

It's also a fairly fascinating RPG. Set in a techno-fantasy universe where, in the year 2030 or so, Charles Barkley is in hiding and basketball is outlawed. You tromp around Neo New York as the now 60 year old Barkley, trying to escape from a past that haunts him.

Meet Larry Byrd as a priest. Evade Michael Jordan and the rest of the anti-b-ball police. Find out why a secret organization wants your only son dead. Save your game by listening to xenophobic gas pumps rant about the glories of Japan and how crappy the rest of the world is. It's good stuff.

While watching the oddly elaborate story unfold is my main draw in this game, the battle system keeps me playing too. It's very interactive; you won't be just selecting "Super B-ball CRUSHER" from a list of commands and calling it a day. Every character has unique active battle commands that you can enter when it's their turn. The battle system is far more active than any other 2d, turn-based RPG that I've played.

If you're up for a bizarre ride through a strange, post-apocalyptic vision of our planet's future, give this one a download.

Just a side note: The official site for Tales of Games, the company that developed BSU&JG, is kind of not built yet. The temporary site that they have up will get you to the proper download link. I assume when they're done making their site, downloading this game will be made easier.

Friday, November 23, 2007

Nifflas Stories

In case you've missed the buzz, Nifflas has produced his third masterpiece. This time with a fabulous level editor/creator, Nifflas' newest creation is not one game, but many. Each a world potentially as large as the one we encountered in Knytt, the "stories" in Knytt Stories are captivating, eerie expanses that will draw you in and only let you go once you've mastered them.

The free download of the game client and editor comes with a tutorial plus a large level entitled "The Machine". Also available for download are five other levels made by Niffilas himself and a third-party expansion pack with levels designed by some of the beta testers. All in all, there are eleven full worlds to explore (plus the tutorial) once you download all of the expansions listed on Nifflas's site. With an editor as easy and fun to use as the one included with the game, I'm sure that there'll be even more worlds to explore as time goes on. In any case, Knytt Stories is hands down the best game that Nifflas has come up with yet. Check out this great game by following the link to his site in the link dump to the right.

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Don't Drop the Narbacular

About a week ago, a buddy of mine got the Orange Box. While I don't generally like first-person shooters, there have been some exceptions. I did love the magical and ranged combat in Morrowind and I'm quite enthused about the combat system for the upcoming MMORPG, Age of Conan. Neither of these games really capture what most people enjoy about FPSers, namely fast and furious fragging.

As you can image, Team Fortress really didn't trip my trigger. While Halflife was better than a lot of other FPSers of its time, even HL:2 didn't really do much for me. What did wow and amaze me was a happy little shooter that, well... isn't really a shooter at all.

Challenging, smart, and downright funny, Portal deserves to win an award this year. Perhaps a trophy. Or a pizza. Or at least a pizza trophy.

The team of people Valve Software hired to create Portal previously wrote games under the cooperate moniker Nuclear Monkey Software. In looking at Nuclear Monkey's main project, it's easy to see where the concept for Portal came from.

The concept of Narbacular Drop is the same as portal: open an orange portal, then open a blue portal, then travel through one to exit out the other. At its core, it's a puzzle game. You have to find the right place to create portals to move objects, flip switches, and avoid dangers.

Narbacular Drop is set in a classic fantasy setting and has "classic" graphics, but the element that makes Portal a great game is there in Narbacular Drop too. It's a free download from Nuclear Monkey's website and there are many free mods that give additional levels and cool new features. Check out this gem of a freeware game by clicking its link to the right.

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Why play it? The puzzles with portals cause you to have to think differently. Innovative gameplay is always a reason to give a game a try.

Friday, October 12, 2007

Let's get awesome!



I don't own a Wii, though I wish I did. When I do end up buying one, the first game I plan on buying is Super Paper Mario. What a great twist on the classic platformer! The Wii aside, a new indie game for the PC has burst into my sphere of awareness. Competing for the title of "unreleased game that Tony will trade his car for", Fez has joined Aquaria in this regard. To quote one poster on the Fez forums of The Independent Gamer : "It’s a whole different beast from Super Paper Mario. A different, AWESOME beast."

Not only does the gameplay look great, the music is a spectacular throwback to my childhood video gaming experiences. Think of me what you will, but it never occurred to me that people made music like this for a living. It's a whole new scene that I'm going to have to explore a bit more. For now, enjoy the video and get pumped about another really cool looking game! Like all the rest, keep up with news about Fez by following the link to your right.

UPDATE!: Fez recently won the award for Excellence in Visual Art at the 2008 Indie Games festival! Go Kokoromi!

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Where the Paramecia Flow Like Wine

The Minneapolis Star Tribune ran an article about the current revolution in video gaming to simplify. FlOw certainly does this and does it beautifully. You start your life as a short, multi-cellular worm and dive deep into the drop of water that is your home in search of food. As you eat, your body evolves, allowing you to move faster and eat more. As you descend into the water droplet and eat the final organism, you split off a piece of yourself and start the game anew as a different, single-celled creature.

Providing hours of chompy, evolutionary fun, flOw hits the mark. According to Casual Gameplay, flOw was Jenova Chen and Nicholas Clark's masters of fine arts thesis at the University of Southern California. I certainly hope that they graduated with honors after a masterpiece like this one.

Enough reading. More playing! Check it out in the link dump to the right.

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Why play it? It's games like this that keep me sifting through all of the crap that's out there. On the days where I think "If I have to look at one more add for Adventure Quest, I'll kill ever last game designer out there!", I'll think of flOw and be at peace with the universe. Thank you Nicholas and Jenova. Thank you.

Monday, July 23, 2007

Orisinality

So, I've been debating for some time now on which Orisinal game(s) to post about. Well, I'm taking the easy way out and just tossing you all a link to Orisinal.com. You can't make me pick a favorite! You can't!

If you could, it might be "Bugs". Or if I'm in the mood for a puzzle game, I'd probably pick "Bauns". You know, "Roperunner" is pretty damn fun too once you get the hang of the control scheme. Gah! How can so many great games come from one mind?

There's also a rather nifty eCard maker down toward the bottom of the page that allows you to arrange flowers and then send off your unique arrangement for that special occasion. Yes, that one. Aren't you glad I reminded you?

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Why play it? Erm, don't I mean "Why play them?" Well, play them because they are fun. Play them because they are cute. Play them because they are both extremely challenging and extremely gorgeous. To put it simply, Ferry's games are what all Flash artists should strive toward making. And you should strive toward the link to Orisinal.com on the right.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Chalk another up for Konjak!

I really enjoyed Konjak's game Noitu Love and was briefly amused with his simple (yet infuriating!) puzzle game called Tripline. Chalk, on the other hand, is in a category by itself.

Chalk is polished. Looking like something you'd buy for the Nintendo DS, this freeware gem amassed 14,000 downloads in one week. The play style is similar to a scrolling shooter, but even that comparison is kind of a stretch. Control is all done with a mouse, but if you have a PC with a touch screen, that's when this game really shines.

There's not really a story to this game per se, but you control a school girl (teacher?) who's got a magic piece of chalk. You have to defeat enimes by drawing lines with this chalk between them and the bulletts that they shoot. You can also destroy barriers and such in the same manner.

I'm not quite sure how the creator came up with a concept like that, but it's pure genious. Follow the link on the left and try it out.

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Why play it? It's an innovative concept and you're an innovative player. It's also fun. You like fun, right?

Saturday, July 14, 2007

A Mid-Knytt Snack

I'm always searching for good games. Heck, this blog is all about the gems I've found online. I found two such gems in a little corner of the Internet that belongs to Nifflas. At their most basic level, "Within a Deep Forest" and "Knytt" are throwbacks to a time when hopping from platform to platform was what playing video games meant. What sets Nifflas's games apart from the rest is their mood.

In both games, the mood is similar. It's this odd sense of desolation mixed with freedom that I've only experienced in dreams. When I was around 7 or 8 years old, I had a reoccurring dream in which I was completely alone. I don't mean "alone" like my parents had left me somewhere. In my dreams, I woke up one morning to find that everyone in the world, as far as I could tell, had vanished completely and, once I had walked around for a bit, I knew that they were never going to return. However, these dreams were not nightmares. They had this sense to them that I now had a lot of responsibility on my shoulders. With this responsibly came a sense of freedom.

The main characters aren't actually alone in these games. There are creatures that roam about, but they are certainly not your typical video-game monsters. For the most part, they're benign. These monsters don't typically interact with the main character; they are just going about their business as if you're not bouncing around or scaling walls in front of them. They are little more than interesting background props. The lack of interaction with other characters, along with the dreamlike ambient music, only serves to reinforce the mood of beautiful isolation.

These games are platformers; but they're platformers with a heavy dose of "Myst"-style exploration poured into them. Though the graphics are pretty simple, both of Nifflas' games stand out as stark dreamscapes of twisting tunnels and odd rock formations. All in all, these games are really quite spectacular. Follow the link and check them out for yourself.

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Why play it? These are the only platformers that I can describe as "haunting" and not feel too cheesy about using that adjective. This is one of them.

Friday, July 13, 2007

We were the first that ever burst; Into that silent sea.

I don't know that I've ever been quite so excited about an upcoming game as I am about Aquaria. It's not yet released, but I've been following the boards at bit-blot.com closely ever since Alec and Derek decided to enter it in to the Independent Games Festival. They won the grand prize and it's easy to see why.

Aquaria is beautiful. From the rich 2-D landscapes to the wonderful voice-acting, what I've heard and seen from the trailers just leaves me with spindles all over my skin. Every trailer that I've seen makes the animation and control look ultra-fluid, much like the ocean in which the main character is living.

The story appears to center around Naija, a young mer-girl who awakes without her memory in the vast ocean world of Aquaria. Watch the trailer on the website to see more. Your guess is as good as mine on how the story will unfold, but I can assure you one thing; with the amount of care that Derek and Alec have put into this game, it's going to be spectacular.

One of the things that excites me the most is that the inspiration for this game comes from three of my all-time favorite games -- Metroid, Zelda, Castlevania: Symphony of the Night. If you're in to pigeonholing games, I suppose that Aquaria falls under the category of "action adventure". From reading the blog and message boards on Bit-Blot, it sounds like there's a lot of exploration involved also. With the fluidity of the control scheme and the rich, hand-drawn graphics, I have a feeling that the exploration of Aquaria alone is going to be more fun than half of the games out on the market now.

Check out the link to Aquaria and marvel at it for a while. Hopefully you'll become as hopelessly addicted to a game you've never even played yet as I have. I'm just here to share the love.

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Why play it? Well, you can't. Not yet at least. When they release Aquaria, it'll be plain to see why.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

...and the greatest of these is Loathe.

I was not impressed the first time I tried Kingdom of Loathing. My first impression of KoL was that it has terrible graphics, a clunky interface, and that the whole game is nothing but a big spoof. How can a game that's one big running gag about roleplaying have any staying power?

Spoof it may be, yet after playing out my first day in the game, this little web-based, turn-based MMORPG has really grown on me. KoL is pure genius. The art may be bad, but it's intentionally so. The interface may be clunky, but you can navigate around well enough. The wit and wordplay of the item descriptions alone pulled this one ahead of many other MMORPGs out there. Jick (the creator) is hilarious. He's successfully created a game that mocks all other RPGs while still being completely engrossing.

The first thing that KoL reminded me of was a goofy card game I discovered at GenCon back in 2000 called Munchkin. I'm not sure if Jick got his original inspiration from Munchkin, but KoL certainly feels a lot like an pre-pubescent game of D&D.

The Kingdom of Loathing isn't just laughs though. This game has some rather interesting features. Every character level up to level 13 has its own quest associated with it. After you've finished your level 13 quest, you can continue to level up and go about your business. With levels comes more powerful spells and the ability to fight more powerful monsters. However, many players choose to Ascend, allowing them to save one of their skills from that life and start over again with a new class at lvl 1. Ascending also allows you to up the difficulty of the game, giving you better rewards upon finishing that Ascension. A typical ascension takes about 2 weeks of game play, but many people have it down to a science and have ascended within 2 days. It's all a pretty nifty system that keeps the game interesting.

KoL is completely free to play. It operates on donations and, yes, donors do get in-game benefits. For every $10 you donate, you get a "Mr. Accessory". This is a fairly powerful item in itself, but you can also use Mr. Accessories at Mr. Store to buy various items, including familiars and special items that change every month. As in many games that run on donations, you can get some really cool stuff as a donating member. However, Jick has made sure that items gained from donating will never unbalance the game. I've never felt like I'm at a disadvantage because I don't have the most current item of the month, yet I still drool over them and can't wait to see what's in store (Mr. Store, that is) for next month.

I'm just finishing my first Ascension in the Kingdom. It's been a good run and I think I'll be playing this game for a while. I've added a widget (or whatsit or whatchamacallit... fascomis?) to the side of this page with in-game contact info for various MMORPGs that I'm playing. If you'd like to chat, message me in game. I'll be happy to explain the ropes to you.

No beggars though. Beggar.

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Why play it? KoL is free to play and is an engaging romp through a fantasy setting...that's full of stick-figures. Happiness.

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Tibia - The Siren's Opening Verse

In my opening post, I mentioned a little game called Tibia. Like a first love, I briefly thought that this could be the one for me. Though I was grossly mistaken on the "One" status of Tibia (it's really quite embarrassing), it is quite an enjoyable little game. CipSoft, the creators of Tibia seem to have added quite a few more features to it since I last time I played.

Like many free-to-play games, Tibia is full of the usual riffraff. Scammers, and "rotflmao-omg-lolz ^_^" noobs are a dime a dozen. The graphics aren't the best and the control scheme is a little counter-intuitive. However, there's a pretty nice new player training system that gets you on your feet pretty quickly. You start off on the newbie island where there are quests to complete and monsters to slay. Everything you do there prepares you for your eventual decision to leave the noobie island for the mainland and picking a character class. One of the other things I really like about Tibia is the fact that there are many multi-lingual people. On an average day, I generally see English, Spanish, German, Portuguese, and French spoken. I like to see that in an online game. It proves that this game really does have a world-wide fan base.

While tibia didn't hold my attention like some other RPGs have done, it's still worth taking a look at. I've added a link to Tibia in the right-hand, "MMORPG Links" bar. Check it out already!

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Why play it? These days, there are a lot of games out there that offer what Tibia has. Play Tibia if you're looking for a more retro feel to your MMORPG without losing too many of the features that the others offer.