I agree 100% with your assessment of Project X Zone. I couldn't get into the battle system and the occasional amusing quip between characters wasn't enough to keep me interested.TSTR wrote: 6. Project X Zone (3DS)
Project X Zone
Games Beaten 2015
Re: Games Beaten 2015
Re: Games Beaten 2015
I'm still only about halfway through Project X Zone because it is definitely way too long.
Blizzard Entertainment Software Developer - All comments and views are my own and not representative of the company.
Re: Games Beaten 2015
It definitely takes some determination to push through. I remember being at like Chapter 20 and looking up the total number. 
- prfsnl_gmr
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 12410
- Joined: Mon Jun 01, 2009 10:26 pm
- Location: Charlotte, North Carolina
Re: Games Beaten 2015
1. Cut the Rope (3DS)
2. Ratchet & Clank Future: Tools of Destruction (PS3)
3. Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth (XBOX)
4. Jewel Link Chronicles: Mountains of Madness (NDS)
5. Super Mario 3D World (WIIU)
6. Mario Kart 7 (3DS)
7. Kirby Triple Deluxe (3DS)
8. Gunman Clive (3DS)
9. Child of Light (WIIU)
10. Gunman Clive 2 (3DS)
11. Mighty Switch Force! Hyper Drive Edition (WIIU)
12. Shifting World (3DS)
Shifting World in a puzzle/platformer for the Nintendo 3DS, and I both loved it and hated it.
The game is often infuriating. The jump controls are unresponsive, and the horrible controls, coupled with the game's poor design, results in both unpredictable deaths and a tremendous amount of frustration. The game's map is horribly designed, full of icons obscuring many of its salient features, and almost completely useless. The game makes poor use of the 3DS's 3D effect; the soundtrack (which should have been ska given the games stark black-and-white checker pattern aesthetic) never varies; and the last few levels are littered with bugs. (One allowed my character to jump entirely out of the map near the end of an exceptionally difficult level and another resulted in instant, unpredictable, and unavoidable death.) The game also lacks any sort of checkpoint system; so, all of these unpredictable and unavoidable deaths forced me to replay long segments of the game. Finally, the game's 60 levels do not provide nearly enough content to justify its $30 price. (Thankfully, I purchased my copy for $5.)
Nonetheless, I ended up enjoying the game despite its long list of flaws. First, the game is exceptionally difficult, and completing each level felt like a genuine accomplishment. Second, the game's mechanics are fascinating. Your character "shifts" o navigate each of the game's levels, and whenever he does so, he flips the levels map 180 degrees, turns negative spave into positive space, and turns positive space into negative space. (Accordingly, to climb a ledge, your character "shifts" the ledge into negative space and rotates the map 180 degrees, falls to the "top" of the ledge, and then "shifts" the ledge back to positive space rotated 180 degrees.) The game also contains portals that "shift" negative space to positive space and vice-versa without rotating the map. It contains buttons that rotate the map 90, 180, or 270 degrees. Finally, your character eventually learns to flatten the world into two dimensions to create platforms, destroy positive space, and close portals. Any one of these mechanics would have been enough for a one puzzle-platforming game, but combining them resulted in one of the most challenging and fascinating puzzle-platformers on any system.
In sum, the game is both wonderfully designed and technically inept. Ironing out a few technical issues and allowing me to zoom in on the map and pan around each level would have improved the game tremendously, and in light of the game's multiple technical issues, I really cannot recommend it to anyone. If, however, you are looking for a true difficult puzzle-platforming challenge - and if you find a copy of the game for a good price - you may want to give Shifting World a shot.
2. Ratchet & Clank Future: Tools of Destruction (PS3)
3. Call of Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth (XBOX)
4. Jewel Link Chronicles: Mountains of Madness (NDS)
5. Super Mario 3D World (WIIU)
6. Mario Kart 7 (3DS)
7. Kirby Triple Deluxe (3DS)
8. Gunman Clive (3DS)
9. Child of Light (WIIU)
10. Gunman Clive 2 (3DS)
11. Mighty Switch Force! Hyper Drive Edition (WIIU)
12. Shifting World (3DS)
Shifting World in a puzzle/platformer for the Nintendo 3DS, and I both loved it and hated it.
The game is often infuriating. The jump controls are unresponsive, and the horrible controls, coupled with the game's poor design, results in both unpredictable deaths and a tremendous amount of frustration. The game's map is horribly designed, full of icons obscuring many of its salient features, and almost completely useless. The game makes poor use of the 3DS's 3D effect; the soundtrack (which should have been ska given the games stark black-and-white checker pattern aesthetic) never varies; and the last few levels are littered with bugs. (One allowed my character to jump entirely out of the map near the end of an exceptionally difficult level and another resulted in instant, unpredictable, and unavoidable death.) The game also lacks any sort of checkpoint system; so, all of these unpredictable and unavoidable deaths forced me to replay long segments of the game. Finally, the game's 60 levels do not provide nearly enough content to justify its $30 price. (Thankfully, I purchased my copy for $5.)
Nonetheless, I ended up enjoying the game despite its long list of flaws. First, the game is exceptionally difficult, and completing each level felt like a genuine accomplishment. Second, the game's mechanics are fascinating. Your character "shifts" o navigate each of the game's levels, and whenever he does so, he flips the levels map 180 degrees, turns negative spave into positive space, and turns positive space into negative space. (Accordingly, to climb a ledge, your character "shifts" the ledge into negative space and rotates the map 180 degrees, falls to the "top" of the ledge, and then "shifts" the ledge back to positive space rotated 180 degrees.) The game also contains portals that "shift" negative space to positive space and vice-versa without rotating the map. It contains buttons that rotate the map 90, 180, or 270 degrees. Finally, your character eventually learns to flatten the world into two dimensions to create platforms, destroy positive space, and close portals. Any one of these mechanics would have been enough for a one puzzle-platforming game, but combining them resulted in one of the most challenging and fascinating puzzle-platformers on any system.
In sum, the game is both wonderfully designed and technically inept. Ironing out a few technical issues and allowing me to zoom in on the map and pan around each level would have improved the game tremendously, and in light of the game's multiple technical issues, I really cannot recommend it to anyone. If, however, you are looking for a true difficult puzzle-platforming challenge - and if you find a copy of the game for a good price - you may want to give Shifting World a shot.
Escape from Butcher Bay is an excellent game. It is one of my very favorite games on the Xbox, and I am glad that you enjoyed it as much as I did.ExedExes wrote:6. *NEW* The Chronicles of Riddick: Escape from Butcher Bay (PC) (April 5)
- Markies
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- Contact:
Re: Games Beaten 2015
I beat Top Gear Rally for the Nintendo 64!
I recently picked this game up for about $5, so my expectations were rather low along with hearing very little about the game. However, I was rather pleasantly surprised. The racing is fun and exciting and never got too boring. The music was unique and not too bad to listen to. I really like the different cars and courses as they both varied and different from one another. The graphics are good, but some edges can be clearly seen. Handling could be better and it was annoying for your car to do weird things when not hitting the side of a wall especially if you hit the side of a mountain. Also, the races were a bit too long, but nothing too irritating. Overall, I was pleasantly surprised and would be a good pick for any hardcore driving fan.
I recently picked this game up for about $5, so my expectations were rather low along with hearing very little about the game. However, I was rather pleasantly surprised. The racing is fun and exciting and never got too boring. The music was unique and not too bad to listen to. I really like the different cars and courses as they both varied and different from one another. The graphics are good, but some edges can be clearly seen. Handling could be better and it was annoying for your car to do weird things when not hitting the side of a wall especially if you hit the side of a mountain. Also, the races were a bit too long, but nothing too irritating. Overall, I was pleasantly surprised and would be a good pick for any hardcore driving fan.
Re: Games Beaten 2015
The 3 original GB games, the 3 GBA games, or the 3 DS games?MrPopo wrote:I'm really on the fence about the three Gameboy games. I've watched some gameplay on Youtube and they don't seem very interesting, but maybe I just didn't see enough.
I can only speak to the GBA games, but I'd be happy to fill you in if you're interested.
Re: Games Beaten 2015
The original GB games. I own and have beaten all the GBA and DS games.marurun wrote:The 3 original GB games, the 3 GBA games, or the 3 DS games?MrPopo wrote:I'm really on the fence about the three Gameboy games. I've watched some gameplay on Youtube and they don't seem very interesting, but maybe I just didn't see enough.
I can only speak to the GBA games, but I'd be happy to fill you in if you're interested.
Blizzard Entertainment Software Developer - All comments and views are my own and not representative of the company.
- Exhuminator
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- Contact:
Re: Games Beaten 2015
1. Devil's Attorney (Android | 2012 | strategy) (7/10)
2. Resident Evil 5 (360 | 2009 | action adventure) (8/10)
3. Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed (360 | 2010 | kart racer) (8/10)
4. Dragon Quest VIII (PS2 | 2005 | JRPG) (9/10)
5. Gears of War (360 | 2006 | cover shooter) (6/10)
6. Uncharted: Golden Abyss (Vita | 2012 | action adventure) (7/10)
7. Orcs & Elves (DS | 2007 | dungeon crawler) (7/10)
8. From The Abyss (DS | 2008 | action-RPG) (5/10)
9. Army of Two (360 | 2008 | cover shooter) (7/10)
10. Psychic World (Master System | 1991 | platformer) (4/10)
11. Endless Ocean: Blue World (Wii | 2010 | adventure / simulation) (9/10)
12. Journey to Silius (NES | 1990 | platformer) (6/10)
13. Sword Master (NES | 1992 | platformer) (3/10)
14. Project: Snowblind (PC | 2005 | FPS) (7/10)
15. Yakyuuken Part II - Gal's Dungeon (Famicom | 1989 | maze / puzzle) (5/10)
16. Bishoujo Sexy Derby (Famicom | 1988 | horse racing) (2/10)
17. SiN Episodes: Emergence (PC | 2006 | FPS) (5/10)
18. Seirei Gari (AKA Ghost Hunter) (NES | 1989 | puzzle / adventure) (4/10)
19. The Guardian Legend (NES | 1989 | action-RPG / shmup) (9/10)
20. Prey (PC | 2006 | FPS) (7/10)
21. Ys IV: Mask of the Sun (SFC | 1993 | action-RPG) (4/10)
22. Star Wars Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader (GameCube | 2001 | combat flight sim) (3/10)
23. Ys V: Lost Kefin, Kingdom of Sand (SFC | 1995 | action-RPG) (7/10)
24. Bonk's Adventure (TurboGrafx-16 | 1990 | platformer) (6/10)
25. Lost Kingdoms (GameCube | 2002 | CCG-action-RPG) (8/10)
26. Bonk's Revenge (TurboGrafx-16 | 1991 | platformer) (6/10)
27. Blazing Lazers (TurboGrafx-16 | 1989 | shmup) (7/10)
28. Heatseeker (PS2 | 2007 | arcade flight combat sim) (7/10)
2. Resident Evil 5 (360 | 2009 | action adventure) (8/10)
3. Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed (360 | 2010 | kart racer) (8/10)
4. Dragon Quest VIII (PS2 | 2005 | JRPG) (9/10)
5. Gears of War (360 | 2006 | cover shooter) (6/10)
6. Uncharted: Golden Abyss (Vita | 2012 | action adventure) (7/10)
7. Orcs & Elves (DS | 2007 | dungeon crawler) (7/10)
8. From The Abyss (DS | 2008 | action-RPG) (5/10)
9. Army of Two (360 | 2008 | cover shooter) (7/10)
10. Psychic World (Master System | 1991 | platformer) (4/10)
11. Endless Ocean: Blue World (Wii | 2010 | adventure / simulation) (9/10)
12. Journey to Silius (NES | 1990 | platformer) (6/10)
13. Sword Master (NES | 1992 | platformer) (3/10)
14. Project: Snowblind (PC | 2005 | FPS) (7/10)
15. Yakyuuken Part II - Gal's Dungeon (Famicom | 1989 | maze / puzzle) (5/10)
16. Bishoujo Sexy Derby (Famicom | 1988 | horse racing) (2/10)
17. SiN Episodes: Emergence (PC | 2006 | FPS) (5/10)
18. Seirei Gari (AKA Ghost Hunter) (NES | 1989 | puzzle / adventure) (4/10)
19. The Guardian Legend (NES | 1989 | action-RPG / shmup) (9/10)
20. Prey (PC | 2006 | FPS) (7/10)
21. Ys IV: Mask of the Sun (SFC | 1993 | action-RPG) (4/10)
22. Star Wars Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader (GameCube | 2001 | combat flight sim) (3/10)
23. Ys V: Lost Kefin, Kingdom of Sand (SFC | 1995 | action-RPG) (7/10)
24. Bonk's Adventure (TurboGrafx-16 | 1990 | platformer) (6/10)
25. Lost Kingdoms (GameCube | 2002 | CCG-action-RPG) (8/10)
26. Bonk's Revenge (TurboGrafx-16 | 1991 | platformer) (6/10)
27. Blazing Lazers (TurboGrafx-16 | 1989 | shmup) (7/10)
28. Heatseeker (PS2 | 2007 | arcade flight combat sim) (7/10)
PLAY KING'S FIELD.
Re: Games Beaten 2015
1. Painkiller - PC
2. Front Mission 4 - PS2
3. Wasteland 2 - PC
4. Arcanum - PC
5. X-COM Terror from the Deep - PC
6. Military Madness - TurboGrafx-16
7. Unreal - PC
8. Shadowrun - SNES
9. Warcraft III - PC
10. Dungeon Keeper - PC
11. Final Fantasy X-2 HD - PS3
12. Descent - PC
13. Quake Mission Pack 2 - Dissolution of Eternity - PC
14. Quake 2 Mission Pack 2 - Ground Zero - PC
15. Sokobond - PC
16. Hybrid Heaven - N64
17. Sonic the Hedgehog - Genesis
18. Castlevania - NES
19. Super Castlevania IV - SNES
20. Castlevania III - NES
21. Castlevania II - NES
22. Castlevania Rondo of Blood - Turbo CD
23. Heretic: Shadow of the Serpent Riders - PC
I beat the original three episodes of Heretic last year, but this year I buckled down and beat the bonus two episodes that came with the retail release (and free download for people who spent money on the shareware version). They continue building on what was done in the first three episodes, but both start off incredibly difficult due to the Doom-era mechanic of starting an episode with only your default weapon and a pittance of ammo. The very first stage of episode 4 is an exercise in ammo conservation and not trying to kill everything (did I mention there's a Maulotaur in the large courtyard just to fuck with you?) The difficulty drops drastically once you get to the second stage of each episode because you aren't scrimping and saving just to get by. There's some pretty neat levels across the two episodes, though episode five introduces a few doors that can only be opened by shooting them, which you don't have any indication is a thing. And in the second to last level there's even a door that you need to shoot with a specific weapon (or at least not the crossbow). That part was frustrating, but fortunately it only shows up among the last few levels and sparingly. But I did have to look up a playthrough on Youtube to figure it out.
2. Front Mission 4 - PS2
3. Wasteland 2 - PC
4. Arcanum - PC
5. X-COM Terror from the Deep - PC
6. Military Madness - TurboGrafx-16
7. Unreal - PC
8. Shadowrun - SNES
9. Warcraft III - PC
10. Dungeon Keeper - PC
11. Final Fantasy X-2 HD - PS3
12. Descent - PC
13. Quake Mission Pack 2 - Dissolution of Eternity - PC
14. Quake 2 Mission Pack 2 - Ground Zero - PC
15. Sokobond - PC
16. Hybrid Heaven - N64
17. Sonic the Hedgehog - Genesis
18. Castlevania - NES
19. Super Castlevania IV - SNES
20. Castlevania III - NES
21. Castlevania II - NES
22. Castlevania Rondo of Blood - Turbo CD
23. Heretic: Shadow of the Serpent Riders - PC
I beat the original three episodes of Heretic last year, but this year I buckled down and beat the bonus two episodes that came with the retail release (and free download for people who spent money on the shareware version). They continue building on what was done in the first three episodes, but both start off incredibly difficult due to the Doom-era mechanic of starting an episode with only your default weapon and a pittance of ammo. The very first stage of episode 4 is an exercise in ammo conservation and not trying to kill everything (did I mention there's a Maulotaur in the large courtyard just to fuck with you?) The difficulty drops drastically once you get to the second stage of each episode because you aren't scrimping and saving just to get by. There's some pretty neat levels across the two episodes, though episode five introduces a few doors that can only be opened by shooting them, which you don't have any indication is a thing. And in the second to last level there's even a door that you need to shoot with a specific weapon (or at least not the crossbow). That part was frustrating, but fortunately it only shows up among the last few levels and sparingly. But I did have to look up a playthrough on Youtube to figure it out.
Blizzard Entertainment Software Developer - All comments and views are my own and not representative of the company.
Re: Games Beaten 2015
What about the PS2 games? Have you gotten through all of the Modernvanias?MrPopo wrote:The original GB games. I own and have beaten all the GBA and DS games.marurun wrote:The 3 original GB games, the 3 GBA games, or the 3 DS games?MrPopo wrote:I'm really on the fence about the three Gameboy games. I've watched some gameplay on Youtube and they don't seem very interesting, but maybe I just didn't see enough.
I can only speak to the GBA games, but I'd be happy to fill you in if you're interested.


