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Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Interview
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Ramsey |
Review
by Steve Metzler |
Review
by Steve Ramsey |
Feature
by Steve Metzler |
Feature
by Steve Metzler |
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And so I find myself in a strange situation, where after nearly 22 years as an avid computer gamer, I seem to
have finally burnt out :-\ A few months ago I began playing A Vampyre Story with a view to reviewing it
for the site, but ran into a show-stopping bug about halfway through that caused me to become disheartened to the
extent that I never finished the game. More recently I picked up a copy of the RPG Risen (by the crowd
that produced the Gothic games) because a few people over at one of the gaming sites I (used to) frequent
thought highly of it. But I couldn't get into that one either.
Lately, I've become something of an active skeptic, and spend most of my time visiting science blogs where we
debate with the likes of creationists, anti-vaxxers, homeopaths, etc. - in other words, science vs. junk science.
It's a very interesting way to pass the time, but in the end you wind up with little of substance to show for your
efforts, other than a fuzzy warm feeling that you might be helping to bring a few poor deluded souls over to the
side of rationality.
So that leaves me in a situation where I just don't know what to do with my free time. Should I take up the
guitar again? I was a keen player for about 30 years, before I gave that hobby up about 8 years back when I became
too busy with the gaming journalism. On the other hand, maybe after a break of a few months I could get back into
gaming again. I've got like 20 games sitting on my shelf that are either not started or partly finished (like
The Witcher, Oblivion, Bioshock et. al.).
I suppose I'll get myself sorted sooner or later. In the meantime, just wanted to explain why metzomagic.com was
stagnating. Still get about 300 visitors a day, but that's mostly for the walkthroughs. Thank you for your support.
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Well, it finally happened. But only thanks to a last minute intervention by The Doctor. Check it out, if you will:
The Project, a.k.a. semisolidradio.com
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The Project was due to go live this weekend. But I was down in the maintenance pit with a colleague running some
critical last-minute checks, and to our horror we discovered that the levels were all wrong!
This is a rather serious setback, and it's likely something only The Doctor can fix. I'll keep you posted...
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So I grew up in New Jersey, and played American football, baseball, and basketball all through those formative years.
But yesterday was one of those life-defining days for me, and it happened to be associated with a sport that I've only
come to love in the past two years or so: rugby.
Ireland, my adopted country for the past 23 years, is not a big place. Between the north and the south, it
amounts to all of 5 million people inhabiting an island that's just slightly larger than the state of New Jersey. But
these people have heart. A lot of heart. And so it was that yesterday I had the good fortune to be sitting in a pub
with a few of my good Irish friends watching Leinster (pronounced 'lenster'), one of the four Irish provinces, facing
off against Leicester (it's pronounced 'lester', and that's an important observation as we'll see in a moment), a
medium sized English city, in the Heineken Cup final.
Unless you live in Europe and follow rugby, which is a minority sport here, you've probably got no idea what the
Heineken Cup even is. Let's just say that it is to European rugby what the World Series is to American baseball. It's
the club championship. In any case, they usually use three letters to represent each team up there in the info blurb
on the television screen when a football (that's soccer to some of you) or rugby match is being broadcast. But because
the two teams on this occasion are identical in the first three letters, the face off had to be represented as LEIC vs.
LEIN. And so it was that LEIN was eventually victorious on the day, for the first time in history, by a score of 19 - 16
after 80 minutes of nail-biting agony. I have a silent chuckle to myself every time I hear the English sportscasters
refer to Leinster as 'the Irish province'. But the explanation of why that is will have to wait for another day.
You will have no doubt observed that metzomagic.com has been dormant of late, this being the first blog entry in six
weeks. But there's a good reason for this, and it's called: The Project. For those of you unfortunate enough to have a
geek as your 'significant other', you will know that The Project eclipses all other things in life, as it must do in
order to be successful. By definition, The Project never comes to fruition. But in this case, against all odds,
it has. In about two weeks I shall reveal all. And then I will be able to get back to the games...
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I'm sure you've all noticed the decreasing shelf space that's been allocated to PC games of general lately, and to adventure
games in particular (but hey, I'm not shouting conspiracy here. It's just that there are fewer adventure games being made
nowadays than there were in the heydays). In any case, yesterday's experience proved to me that making a trip to a shop that
only sells games, as opposed to DVDs, CDs, et. al. really does pay off. I was able to pick up two recent adventure titles of
note, namely: A Vampyre Story and Ceville.
So I'll be loading them up and having a go. You've no doubt also noticed that we've been somewhat remiss here lately
in providing reviews for topical adventure games. Well, hopefully that situation is about to change shortly...
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Back from the hols and somewhat refreshed. I've begun adding World Map images to the guide as an aid to getting you to
areas which may be difficult to find by just wandering:
Fallout 3 guide
Still a ways to go for both the mapping and the guide, but at least it's a start...
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Taking a break in the sun for a few weeks, so this will be the last update for a while. Added some new content to the
Fallout
3 guide, so you might want to check it out.
One thing I've come to realise that needs to be added to the guide when I return: a map. It's one thing when you're following
the main quest and NPCs are putting map markers all over the place for you, but it's quite another thing if I tell you about a
place that's "in the NE part of your World Map". Yes, it's a big, bad world out there in Fallout 3.
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Wouldn't be so presumptuous (there's that word again) as to keep a Fallout 3 diary, but there are those moments that
you occasionally want to capture for posterity, clichés notwithstanding. Picked off this sniper by the name of Arkansas in
Minefield from near the maximum range of a Hunting Rifle with a 30% chance to hit the head in V.A.T.S., Sneak skill about
35%. Then went up to collect all his gear.
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Arkansas head shot |
Who needs a Sniper Rifle? ;-)
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It's tough on the little guy, and I know life isn't fair. But what I found up there on the web last night has me very
disheartened. On what was heretofore (in my opinion anyway) a very respectable site, I found an extremely detailed
Fallout 3 guide. The amount and level of detail was such that in my estimation you'd have to be playing the game for at
least 6 months straight to amass that amount of info (in fact, that's what I'm in the middle of trying to do myself). And
Fallout 3 was only released at the end of October. But then... on one of the pages there was a reference - inadvertent,
I'm sure, because there were no credits given on any of the other pages - to... the Prima Guide!
So then the penny dropped. All that info must have been regurgitated from the official Fallout 3 Prima Strategy Guide.
But wait... you have to pay for that, and it's copyrighted. I'm darn sure that Prima, who has some kind of
inside track with the developers to get access to a ton of inside info on the game, don't give permission in their licensing
agreement for end users to reproduce information contained in their strategy guides for free.
Anyway, this may sound like sour grapes, but when an indy writer like me who has been writing comprehensive RPG guides
for the past 10 years is looking at spending the next 6 months of my evenings to even approach what's already up there, but
up there as plagiarism... well, that's a bit soul destroying. But I'm not going to name any names here. Whistle-blowing
isn't in my job description.
As a result of this discovery, I've decided nonetheless to persevere with my own guide, but to change tack. My usual
approach is to try and document the whole game in one go, but Fallout 3 is so much bigger than anything I've tackled before that
it doesn't lend itself to that approach. So instead of having a static copy of my guide in the database, I've put it in a file
outside of the database so that I can modify it more easily (and more often). I'm including the date I last updated it at the
top of the guide so you can tell if you're looking at the latest version or not. If you did bookmark the version of the guide
that's currently in the database (article index = 861), here is the bookmark for the new, 'fluid' version:
metzomagic.com
Fallout 3 guide: a work in progress
Well, that's the state of play for the time being. I'm not so presumptuous (or naïve) as to believe that my Fallout 3
guide is the only one people are going to look at. But I hope that if you do consult it, you will realise how much effort went
into it, and that it is the genuine and earnest effort of a single person.
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Finished my second pass through the game, and have posted the guide. I'll need to play it through at least one more time
with a high Charisma/Speech character to tease out more of the side quests, but as a first effort that gets you through the
main quest, I think it will serve its purpose well. You can check it out here:
metzomagic.com Fallout 3 guide
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The Fallout 3 guide is coming along quite well. Reckon it's about halfway done, so looking at another 2 weeks or so
of effort to completion. Since this game was so much bigger than its predecessors, I've decided not to bite off the
whole thing in one chunk like I did with the other Fallout guides. Instead, I'm just documenting the main quest and
whatever side quests I happened to come across in my travels. I'll need to make another pass at it with a high charisma
character to tie off some of the optional quests that require a very diplomatic approach.
Someone asked me if I would link to their site, and I said yes... not realising I had neglected to include a links
page on metzomagic.com. Done.
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