TychoCelchuuu

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Posts posted by TychoCelchuuu


  1. On 10/2/2017 at 3:58 AM, Chris K said:

    Hi Henke, I know you're looking for stuff that's on the market right now, but what I'll say might interest you.
    I'm working on a game called Urban Strife, a post-apocalyptic turn-based tactical game with survival elements, like looting, crafting or trading.
    The game is heavily inspired by XCOM and the Jagged Alliance.

     

    Screens: 

    http://www.urbanstrifegame.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/Warehouse.jpg
    http://www.urbanstrifegame.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/screenshot_GasStation-compressor.jpg
    http://www.urbanstrifegame.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/screenshot_Shop-compressor.jpg
    http://www.urbanstrifegame.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/screenshot_Warehouse-compressor.jpg


    Would love to hear your thoughts, or anyone else that reads this and is interested.

    Dude wanted stuff on the market right now more than a year ago, I doubt he's looking for a game that's not out yet.


  2. Hmm. Guessing is going to be tough. I've looked at my top 10 plenty of times but I have zero recollection of it. Everything after the first 2 is basically just a wild guess about something likely in the top 10.

     

    1. Dota 2

    2. Company of Heroes

    3. Spelunky

    4. Men of War

    5. Company of Heroes 2

    6. Team Fortress 2

    7. Fallout New Vegas

    8. The Witcher 3

    9. Skyrim

    10. Alpha Protocol

     

    qSpJIQD.png

     

    I totally forgot Natural Selection 2 and Nuclear Throne existed, so I should've put them up there for sure. I realize now that Company of Heroes, partway through its lifespan, changed its Steam executable and I think that counts as a new game. I didn't know I played that much Assault Squad 2. The #11 and #12 slots were Skyrim and The Witcher 2. I bought The Witcher 3 on GOG.com so obviously Steam didn't track my playtime so I'm an idiot for putting it on my list... I played The Witcher 2 twice which explains how it's so high. Alpha Protocol is down at 37 hours so I wasn't too far off. No real surprises or disappointments or anything I'd say except that TF2 is down at 27 hours, which seems wrong to me. I swear I played that game forever. Am I simply delusional?


  3. On easy mode (such a thing exists, right?) L4D is probably sharing an adventure, not surviving an ordeal. And if the difficulty were on the highest, HL2 would probably feel like an ordeal. Anyways I suggested like 12 games in that post or whatever, I feel like you sort of ignored everything after the first three words, or more specifically the first two words and first number.


  4. I don't know what separates a wave shooter with squad mechanics from a long single-player campaign with designed encounters for 2+ people. What's the difference? HL2 throws waves at you and although it lacks "squad mechanics," it also lacks a squad, because it's single player, and presumably any multiplayer game will have "squad mechanics" simply in virtue of the fact that 2+ people constitute a squad, right? L4D certainly has a long campaign with designed encounters.


  5. I can recommend not watching Kingsman: The Golden Circle. As a fan of the original I was hoping the sequel could capture the same magic and the answer is hell no. It's boring and unfunny and it has none of the interesting stuff from the first movie. I can however recommend Beasts of No Nation which is gorgeous and harrowing and chock full of tremendous performances.


  6. It was very deliberately comedic, although not because of Lawrence's performance. The comedy is the absurdity of all these people showing up in her house and doing crazy stuff and her husband's reactions and so on. That sort of preposterousness, and the other crazy dream logic stuff (like the house descending into a warzone) was my favorite stuff in the film. I do feel like it'll take another viewing or two to really think through all the stuff. Everyone seems to be latching on to the Biblical stuff but to me it also seems like a movie about art and creation and muses and sexism. Throughout the film everyone treats Lawrence like shit, with the exception of Bardem, but he's the one who is ultimately the shittiest to her, because he's using her for this cycle of creation where she has to go through hell every time. She's constantly being bombarded with sexist language, being ignored and disrespected, etc. 

     

    I don't think the symbolism being on the nose is a bad thing or that movies need tons of mystery to be good. I appreciate that the film is not up its own ass trying to be inscrutable. It's okay to make movies that are about things without hiding the fact that they are about things. If it doesn't take sixteen viewings and an MFA to understand your movie, that's okay with me.

     

    Anyways I liked this movie a lot. I could stare at Bardem all day.


  7. Hypothetical questions about what would be the most effective mode of organization in a situation we aren't in are largely impossible to answer, because even knowing what is going to be most effective in the real world is a problem so difficult as to be almost insoluble in certain cases. Speculation about a hypothetical situation is even harder because even more of the relevant variables are unknown and unknowable.


  8. Also the short version is that the difference between a labor union and a corporation is that a corporation's accountability is to its shareholders/owners, whereas a union's accountability is to its members. This means that corporations are not democratic and unions are democratic, or in other words if a corporation is fucking you over, you've got fuck all recourse unless you're rich enough to buy it, whereas if a union is fucking you over, you can vote to alter its policies. For the same reason democracy is a preferable way to run countries (it keeps the leaders accountable), it's a good way to run businesses (by similarly keeping them accountable). No other method of governance has an easy way to remove leaders who are not acting in the interest of their constituents.


  9. I guess I'm having trouble seeing how, when, or why anyone might have claimed that any public policy of any complexity whatsoever won't inevitably have consequences that were unforeseen.