NEWS – And the Monday’s Have It…

So I was finally able to export some of the screenshots from my time in Far Cry 4. Sadly, I haven’t gotten around to completing the game, but I’m getting there. The only frustrating thing so far with the Upload studio on the Xbox One, is you’re only able to Upload one photo at a time. This alone, coupled with the fact that I had approx 300 screenshots saved, was quite time consuming. I’ll have to make an effort to export them daily, instead of building up a queue. Check out the screenshots here.


Moving onto some news for the week: Star Wars, Cities: Skylines, Destiny, Dues Ex, EA’s Free-To-Play, 2K Australia,

Star Wars Battlefront

Lots of news came out over the weekend regarding all things Star Wars. Check out the launch trailer below. The game will be first available to Xbox One users who have EA Access (me), so that’s exciting. The game looks really exciting, although disappointing is the exclusion of any type of campaign. There are smaller co-op/split-screen missions that can be played, but the main point of the game will be the large scale battles online. Also excluded are any type of space battles as all flying segments will take place in-atmosphere. Also announced was that this game with be the original trilogy, before the prequel era.

The first 4 planets were revealed to be Endor, Tatooine, Hoth, and a previously unexplored planet Sullust.

First DLC will be free for those who pre-order, and will be The Battle of Jakku, from the new movie, The Force Awakens.

Release date November 17th, 2015, PC, PS4, and Xbox One.

Cities: Skylines

Paradox Interactive announced that Cities: Skylines has sold 1 million copies within the first month. This is obviously exciting news for the brand and genre. I should get back into my city, as I’ve been neglecting it.

6GB Destiny Patch

Destiny’s latest patch, 1.12 is a whopping 6GB. Included in the fix is some online multiplayer changes, bug fixes to the Raid bosses, and a new Colourblind mode. The House of Wolves Expansion is just around the corner, dropping on May 19th.

More on the patch, Data miners have discovered the plans for two more social spaces to be added to Destiny. To be included in the Expansion, or at a later date, who knows?

Dues Ex: Ghost Mode

The director of Dues Ex: Mankind Divided announced last week that the ghost option will be available throughout entire levels and even the boss fights. Ghost option is the ability to make it past all enemies and levels completely unseen.

EA’s Free2Play Games Getting Shut Down

EA announced that they will be stopping development and support for several of their free-to-play games, including: Battlefield Heroes, Need for Speed World, FIFA World, and Battlefield Play 4 Free.

They did announce, however, new story content and continued support  for Star Wars: The Old Republic.

2K Australia Closing

The Borderland: The Pre-Sequel developer has been announced to be closing. 2K Australia is Australia’s only remaining AAA studio. Previously they were apart of Irrational Games,, best know for the Bioshock series.

“We can confirm we have taken steps to begin the studio closure process for 2K Australia in order to better manage ongoing development costs while improving the working proximity of our creative teams.  We are very grateful for the team’s valuable contributions to numerous 2K projects, and are working with affected staff to explore reassignment opportunities where possible.”


Stick around for the new game releases tomorrow, we’ll talk more about Goat Simulator, Battlefield Hardline, and Far Cry 4 on Wednesday, and I’ll have a quick review up for Goat Simulator on Thursday.

Going outside now….

-iRogan

NEWS – How Does This Thing Work Again?

Lets get this thing back on track, the inconsistency is killing me…


Visceral Games Boss Leaves

Sad to see, but Steve Papoutsis, the Executive Producer on Battlefield Hardline, has left his position as General Manager of Visceral Games. Unsure at this point is if he still works for EA. Hardline, which was just recently released is still expected to receive upcoming story-related DLC. Papoutsis is also known for his work on the Dead Space series, a series which I quite enjoyed.

GTA V Retail

Grand Theft Auto V’s DVD retail version is presumably set to ship as a 7-disc box set. I guess Blu-ray is uncommon on PC? DVD it is. I’d recommend just buying the digital copy ;). Tomorrow!!!

Much DVDs

Much DVDs

Don Mattrick Steps Down as Zynga CEO

Zynga, the mobile games giant, announced that their new-ish CEO, Don Mattrick is stepping down after just 2 years. Mattrick was the former President of Interactive Entertainment at Microsoft until 2013 (before the Xbox One launch) when he joined Zynga.

“I am excited about the company’s trajectory and wish the best for Mark, Zynga and NaturalMotion as I plan to return to Canada to pursue my next challenge,” Mattrick said.

Mankind Divided

Check out the launch trailer for Dues Ex: Mankind Divided:

You’re welcome!

Black Ops: Another One

Call of Duty Black Ops III was announced, no gameplay trailer yet, just a teaser. Activision has confirmed that the game will release in 2015, and it is the Treyarch team that will be releasing it, now that all three teams are working in the 3-year dev cycle. It looks like this will be the first true next-gen exclusive Call of Duty game. Black Ops 3 takes place in a “dark, twisted” future where the lines between humanity and our technology are blurred. Military robotics are the core of warfare.

BLOPS

BLOPS

EA Access

EA’s NHL 15 is now free for subscribers of EA Access. Too bad I already have this game :p. After 3 sports game in a row, I’m curious what EA’s next Vault game will be.

Too bad the NHL 15 has been neutered as far as features, otherwise you’d be seeing my glorious photo ops.

Destiny House of Wolves Expansion

Destiny’s 2nd expansion, House of Wolves is set to release on Tuesday, May 19th, 2015.

The 2nd expansion will not have a new Raid and will instead offer a three-player cooperative multiplayer arena mode.

Bungie announced that a new Raid would be made for release later this year, giving weight to the information out there that states the biggest content release yet to come, is coming out after the expansion release.

Maybe its time to step back in to the fight.


All caught up on news? Good.

Tomorrow will be new games day – prep your wallets! Wednesday I’ll talk about the current queue of games. Thursday will be an iReview, and Friday will see us off into the weekend.

I feel I’ve been kind of slacking off here, and I gotta get back on track.

See you when I get there.

-iRogan

Battlefield Hardline First Impressions

Battlefield Hardline is an interesting game. It’s very much Battlefield 4, but re-skinned into the cops and robbers feel. Through EA Access, I have a 10 hour trial, this includes access to the multiplayer modes, in which there’s a handful, and the first episode of the of the single player campaign.

Battlefield Hardline

6 multiplayer modes are included in the game: Hotwire, Heist, Rescue, Blood Money, Crosshair, and then the standards, Conquest (small and large) and Team Deathmatch.

Hotwire is where the vehicles are control points that need capturing, and the more you drive them and faster you drive them, depletes the other team’s points. First team to eliminate the other’s points, wins

Heist has the criminal team trying to escort cash from the vault to their base. Criminals have limited lives. SWAT’s job is to try and prevent them.

Rescue is Rainbow Six’s new Seige game essentially. 6 vs 6. The criminals are holding 2 hostages and the SWAT team needs to infiltrate the building to extract the hostages or eliminate the criminals. No respawns. Best of 9 rounds.

Blood Money is similar to Heist in that its Cops vs Robbers fighting over a pile of cash, the different is each teams needs to get the loot back to their respective vault.

Crosshair is another small competitive mode where the SWAT is trying to extract a VIP, and the criminals are trying to wipe them out. No Respawns.

Conquest is the Battlefield staple. Huge maps with players and vehicles, and the point is to capture key map points to reduce the enemy’s tickets, which is their ability to respawn.

Team Deathmatch is infantry only, no control points. Just shoot everything that moves.

Multiplayer is very much like Battlefield 4. It looks pretty good, and the game modes have a lot happening, especially with the larger maps of 64 people, so some moments can be a little intense. There is level destruction and map changer’s like sandstorms in the desert maps. The vehicles feel and sound a little clunky, but some of the tools are a nice touch, with the grappling hook and zipline.

The campaign, I feel, is where the game really shines. Obviously better looking than multiplayer, it’s a slower, more personal experience that previous Battlefield games. This is probably the result of Visceral Game’s leading the project. You play Nicholas Mendoza, detective, you play a series of episode chapters throughout Los Angeles in the center of a drug war. Aside of the shooting mechanics, you can shine your badge to get the perp to freeze, allowing for the arrest, you can throw bullet casing to distract people, and you have a scanner to scan rooms for evidence or people for warrants.

Unfortunately the single player trial ends after the first chapter, so the rest of my impressions will have to wait till I’ve completed the game and written the review. Stick around.


Only a bit of news to wrap up today:

Destiny Patch Update News

Bungie has opened up about the pending Destiny patch, stating that it’ll focus on increasing the vault size for weapons and gear, and fixing up some of the Raid bugs when facing off against Atheon and Crota. Lastly, Bungie announced that they’re always listening to fans and tracking the play stats about the Strikes, and focusing more on the popular Strikes that actually get completed, so that the playlists are more to the fanbase liking.

Goat Simulator Coming to Xbox One and 360

Microsoft announced today the Goat Simulator will make its console debut on the Xbox 360 and Xbox One in April. Coffee Stain Studio’s game will be worked on and published by Double Eleven.

Xbox One March Update

March’s update adds the Screenshot functionality, which can but found and managed in the Upload app. They can also be used as background images. Suggested friends has been added, allows players to find friends easier. Tile transparency has been upgraded a bit to add different levels of transparency. And you can now report messages as spam.


See you next week, with more news, Tuesday’s new games, further impressions on Hardline and AC IV Black Flag and a review on Thursday.

Go Outside!
-iRogan

Gamenight, Twitch, and Today’s Updates

Game nights are fun, and sometimes necessary. They help get friends together, to settle differences, and to remind us what gaming once was, and how it continues to keep us together, even if we’re miles, or countries away.

Game night is usually quite the event at my place. Usually involving 4 large flat screen TV’s, 4 Xbox’s (360 and now the One), and two handfuls of people. Quite the epic Friday night filled with Pepsi and drinks.

We typically dabble in Halo, as it’s the easiest game to organize a large group of people, over multiple boxes and TVs, into one online lobby. Alternatively we’ll play some arcade style games. This past Friday saw us playing in The Master Chief Collection, Riptide GP2, #IDARB, and Rayman Legends.


Lately I’ve also been playing around with my streaming capabilities, and Twitch.Tv. This started when I first got the Xbox One when it was released. Streaming through the Xbox is great, especially since it has the Kinect functionality with the camera and microphone. Less great is when you want to switch games, or stream from another console entirely. This problem was apparent to me around the time of the Extra Life charity marathon last October. I was going to be playing a full play-through of Half-Life 2 through the Xbox 360 Orange Box. I had my Xbox 360 plugged into the One, but Twitch only supports XBone games.

My fix was to pick up a capture card. The Elgato Game Capture HD, and a couple webcams. This allowed me to record and broadcast through my TV, game, audio, and the surrounding room, through the webcams.

Ready to Broadcast

Ready to Broadcast

I use Open Broadcast Software to record and stream. It supports multiple inputs, and allows for text overlays. So with my 24 Hour stream, I had the game, the name of the game, 2 webcams, a tinyURL to my charity page, my webpage, and a 24 hr countdown clock.

Lately I’ve been streaming my game nights, or just the random nightly session. I’m not pro yet, mind you. But one day I might start doing game-play videos. We’ll see.

Moving on to some newsworthy stuff….


GTA V – Online Heists

New info started coming out today about the GTA V Online Heists content patch, for those lucky few that started seeing it already, patch is reportedly sitting around 4.8GB in size, on the Xbox One. I have the re-mastered XOne version. However, as I’m writing this, none of my friends do, so I don’t have anyone local to test out these heists with. We’ll have to wait and see, or maybe try on the 360.

Halo Master Chief Xbox One Bundle

Microsoft is launching a Master Chief Collection XBox One bundle to help boost their numbers. The no-frills bundle is available without a Kinect, and a digital copy of the Master Chief Collection. No custom box, no custom controller, standard 500Gb HDD. Kind of a letdown.

Borderlands Aplenty

At Pax East this weekend, Gearbox announced both, the next installment to the Tales From The Borderlands, and the next DLC for Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel.

Tales From the Borderlands, Telltale’s game, will have episode 2 released March 17th, 2015. I’ve been sitting on the TellTale Collection for the XOne for some time now, and I haven’t gotten the chance to start these games. But will soon.

Also announced was the next DLC to Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel – Claptastic Voyage. The DLC takes place inside Claptrap’s head, and is supposed to help bridge the gap between the Pre-Sequel and Borderlands 2. Release March 24th, 2015.

Also released that week is the Handsome Jack Collection, which I’ll be picking up. I was uneasy about the idea of the Pre-Sequel being released on the Xbox 360 and figured that it might be re-released on the One, and lo, here we are. Combo of the Pre-Sequel and Borderlands 2 re-mastered. The Pre-Sequel also includes the Season pass for DLC.

“”I wonder if i plant you in the ground, if you will grow taller?” -Psycho”

Destiny News

A new interesting tidbit from Destiny this week is the Inferno game-play mode in the Crucible:

From the Grimoire:

“A modified variant of multiple Crucible match types, Inferno tests your Light against the darkest of conditions.

Darkness prevails, leaving Guardians to rely on their weaponry and combat skills alone. The enemy can only be found by sight and sound alone. Rely on your teammates and keen tracking to stalk your enemies and shut them down without the trust in your most powerful abilities.

True skill put to the ultimate test. No trackers. No Supers. No bonuses. Only kills earn points.

I’ve been meaning to do a follow-up to December’s review, as I did continue to play, and made it through the DLC, completed the Raid, and made it to level 30. I also quit cold turkey one day, and haven’t really looked back.

Maybe I’ll do a quick play through of the first DLC and write up a follow up/2nd opinion piece. Title it “Change of Heart”, as its both applicable, and the name of an achievement from the game.

Change of Heart (Reverse a decision you made in the upgrade grid) – 20G.

So witty.

Out!

Day 4: iReview – DESTINY – Convoluted By Design

Title:Destiny
Developer: Bungie
Platform: PS3, PS4, Xbox 360, Xbox One
Publisher: Activision
Reviewed on: Xbox One

I love you Destiny, I love you not….

I started off a proponent for Bungie’s newest edition to their family. Sure, they were quick (10 years) to toss off their allegiances to the Microsoft family and their Halo children. It’s understandable. 343 was quick to pick up the reigns and break the Master Chief Collection.

I was, however, a little apprehensive when they signed a 10 year agreement with Activision as a publisher for their next game/dynasty. Activision publishes World of Warcraft, and spams us with Call of Duty games afterall. But Bungie is a company of bright people, so I had faith.

We are all slaves to Destiny

We are all slaves to Destiny

This new agreement turned into a new brand: Destiny. Destiny is to be something huge, something epic. Destiny is something to change the gaming landscape. And maybe, fingers crossed, become another household name, like Halo. What we have right now is a First Person Multiplayer Shooter, or “shared-world shooter”, with its gameplay not unlike its Halo predecessors, but with an online community to support it. What we got was, arguably, not a lot, but with the promise of more to come, and early talks of sequels already.

Bungie and Activision are promising a 10 year life cycle for Destiny, whatever it is, or will be. These partners have invested a lot of time and money and effort into this project and only time will tell if it truly pays off. Financially, it’s already paid off, but when you ask for people’s opinions of the game, you’ll find mixed responses. I’m not of negative opinions towards Destiny, I don’t intend to waste time saying off-putting things about games in general. I play games that I like, and I stop playing, and quickly forget about those I don’t like.

I could go into details about the shortcomings of Destiny’s story, its lack of any real narrative or backstory. How there’s maybe 3 cutscenes, and the rest is fed through unenthused voice-work and text on the screen while the game loads the upcoming mission.

This uncommitted, unwillingness resembles the first time you meet the Speaker, the Voice of the Traveler, Earth’s savior, and now deteriorating squatter. Wait…what? Ok, start over.

Destiny is to be something huge, something epic. Destiny is something to change the gaming landscape.

We play the game as a Guardian, with the choice of 1 of 3 races: Humans, Awoken, and Exo. We are also given the choice of 3 classes: Titan, Warlock, and Hunter. Who are these races? What’s their story? You’re guess is as good as mine.

What we DO know is that The Guardians are the last defenders of humanity, of the last safe city on Earth after the Collapse. Earth was, at one point, very prosperous and advanced. The humans were able to spread out and colonize planets in our Solar System. The Collapse came about and dissolved all of these efforts and nearly brought mankind to extinction. The only humans left were saved by the Traveler, a giant spherical celestial body, or ship, or entity, who had arrived centuries earlier, and who was responsible for Earth original prosperity. Mankind again strived for growth and repopulation of the Solar System, but the Traveler is dying, and there are threatening alien races occupying the System’s previously terra-formed planets. As a Guardian, we are tasked with investigating and eliminating the Darkness, that, which ails the Traveler, and destroying the encroaching alien threats before humanity is wiped out.

We are the three best friends

We are the three best friends

As intimated, we have 3 class choices, each having 2 sub-class traits. The Titan is the brute of the trio, relying more on armour, and melee abilities. The Titan’s Striker subclass allows the player to release a huge ground smash, killing anything within its range. The Titan’s Defender subclass can provide a protective spherical shield to the group. The Titan is equipped with a jetpack , allowing access to higher elevations which may lead to some truly epic ground smash moments – if one was so inclined.

Up next is the Warlock, which can be looked on as the tank/support of the three. Warlocks focus on regaining their health and shields quickly. The Warlocks Voidwalker subclass has the player throw a large Nova Bomb that detonates on impact. The Sunsinger subclass increases all the player’s abilities dramatically for a short time, and reduces all cool downs. When spec’d high enough, they can also revive themselves after death. Warlocks have the ability to glide for a short time to scope out an area or line up the Nova Bomb.

Finally, the Hunter is Destiny’s scout. Quick, and agile, and focused on a quicker combat style. The Hunter’s Golden Gun subclass provides the player with just that, a Golden Gun, for a short burst, and only 3 rounds. Hunters are also equipped with a throwing knife for melee, and the Bladedancer subclasses focuses on a charged blade. Bladedancers can also utilize an invisibility perk.

Destiny’s gameplay, as previously mentioned, is of the FPS genre, but with a Role-Playing MMO feel. We’re equipped with the basics: a primary, secondary, and heavy gun, grenades, and hover bike. We also have to manage 5 types of armour. Complying with RPG expectations, we have an inventory to store our guns and gear that we pickup, and each weapon and piece of armour has experience and perks. Our subclass of choice also levels up and unlocks new perks, and attribute tweaks as we progress. These perks and characteristics allow the player to adjust their Guardian to their preferred play-style.

So, the familiar Halo game mechanics are there.

The game’s features worlds on Earth, the Guardian Tower on Earth (Destiny‘s online hub), the Moon, Venus and Mars. Reportedly more planets to come with expansions and sequels, but these are what we have now. There are a handful of story missions, one or two Strike missions and a Patrol Mission, per planet. Strikes are like the boss missions, and Patrols give you access to the planet to do as you see fit, and maybe partake in a few fetch quests. The structure is thus: story missions can be played alone or in a Fireteam made up of 3 friends. These missions are also shared online, so you’ll see other Guardians running around killing the same enemy respawn groups you’re fighting. Certain portions of the mission get closed off to just your Guardian or Fireteam. These are essentially the dungeons of the game, with the promise of focused firefights and possible loot drops.

The Strike mission is dedicated to the Boss fights. They’re a lengthier mission, higher chances of pick-ups, and experience upon completion. These mission are mandatory 3 player excursions. Patrol is last, and essentially self-explanatory. Solo or in a group, you have free reign of the planet to mine for kills, loot, collectables, or partake in fetch quests. Again, it’s another “shared” mission, so you’ll see other Guardians running around.

So the familiar Halo game mechanics are there, there’s even a personal hover bike to get you around the large levels. The game is very pretty, and I believe this is where Bungie truly shines. Their world creation is nearly unmatched, and the attention to detail is literally seen on the moss covered walls, the sides of structures decayed after decades of wind, where the other face’s side is unblemished, or even the sand slowly floating off the dune tips on Mars. These planets showcase the civilizations that’ve been there, whether it be the remains of the past human colonies, or the recent alien inhabitants. The design shows age, decay, overgrowth and neglect. We’re not told what happened; only that something happened. We’re shown the remains of colonies past, but not encouraged to look any deeper, or ask questions, just look upon it and wonder and reflect. There are sights and vistas to marvel at, but save for the structures, there’s no history, no evidence of life. This is how fan fiction is written.

There's nothing I hate more than an alien with no respect for history...

There’s nothing I hate more than an alien with no respect for history…

Now, at this point, with maybe 8 to 10 hours invested, cracks in this game’s gorgeous exterior start to show. The leveling aspect and the dark role-playing grime start to show teeth. Your character’s max experience level is 20. You’ll reach this in 8 hours by just playing the story. Level 20 is when you get access to the Tower’s goodies. These goods are still kept out of reach, where the vendors that sell their armour and weapons all require you to meet certain requirements. These demands are met by endlessly playing the same story missions, and Strikes, and fetch quests, and multiplayer PvP matches, over and over. To level beyond 20, you must acquire newer armour with an attribute called Light. Found through drops if you’re lucky, but to buy the legendary gears will require time and perseverance.

Accessing the game’s first Raid requires a level 26 character. The time and patience to tolerate this tedium will not be for everyone, and the scope isn’t fully explained to begin with. The game at this point takes on a life of its own, and becomes something entirely different. “So you’ve beat the story missions? That’s great!”, it proclaims. “The darkness still loom”. Come back and play the same tired missions some more. There’s weekly and daily showcased Strikes. Come play with friends at the Heroic difficulty if you dare. You might get something cool. Or come and play for hours in the PvP arena to rake up enough experience and points to buy a gun or a helmet off this vendor. Some can tolerate this. Some might not have known what they were getting into when they purchased Destiny. Some might ask why the grinding is necessary and level 26 is a requirement to access the Raid.

Maybe the layered murkiness is there to confuse us, keep us returning, showing a little more at a time, until the next expansion is released. Maybe I’ll continue to play this game with friends, in the spirit of fun. I don’t anticipate reaching level 26 or accessing the Raid. Maybe the DLC will change things for those out there like me, behind the curve, looking for the Light. I won’t know. Why invest in two pricey expansions, further supporting a game that didn’t have the sufficient content to justify the initial buy-in?

For those who like Halo, and repetitious acts in futility.

Notable Achievements:
Change of Heart (Reverse a decision you made in an upgrade grid) – 20G
The Life Exotic (Obtain and equip a piece of exotic gear) – 20G