Rashav3rak

joined 4 years ago
[–] [email protected] 34 points 8 months ago (2 children)

I mean, he's right. We just let them do it. If he'd like us to take matters into our own hands I'm sure we can oblige.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 8 months ago (2 children)

I love that I put on a white noise video to help me sleep and now my feed is 80% white noise videos

 

I'm not one to get into a F2P online competitive shooter, but The Finals has hooked me. I used to play a lot of TF2 and L4D vs mode back in the day, but nothing since then has looked like anything I'm interested in playing. Never played any CoD, Battlefield, Overwatch, Destiny, PUBG, Fortnite, Apex Legends, never had any interest. I guess actually I did play Fall Guys for a hot second and it was fun but the novelty wore off quickly and it's not really the same genre. All that is to say I have very little to compare to The Finals.

I only picked it up because environmental destruction in games is interesting to me, and The Finals is free so there was no barrier to entry. I just wanted to check out the destruction mechanics. Now it's the first game I reach for in my free time. Like I said, I don't have the experience or the language to discuss the finer points of the game's balance or whatever and frankly I don't give a shit because I'm having fun. I was playing the new event they have going on and it was so satisfying to know that I could access the heavily guarded cashout station on the floor above me by destroying the ceiling to bring it down to my floor. I'm aware this isn't the first multiplayer shooter to make destruction part of the game, but the way entire buildings can be brought down is so cool and something I haven't seen since maybe the Red Faction games. The other day I got matched with a pair of sledgehammer heavy teammates who didn't even try to win and just ran around leveling the map. We ended up almost winning anyway because they caused so much chaos that the other teams couldn't easily get to the vaults and cashout stations. I love that even when you're not very good at the game (and I'm not) you can just try to create enough chaos that you give your teammates an opening.

Gotta say though, this is my first direct experience with games that have seasons and battle passes and it's wild how manipulative it is. You can see exactly how it's engineered to create FOMO and to keep you from being able to calculate the real monetary value of anything you're buying. Everyone who has been around this block is like "yeah that's how it works" and I follow the industry enough to be familiar with these practices, but it's still kind of shocking. I haven't spent a dime on the game yet, and I may never. We'll see how far I get on the battle pass as a casual player before season 1 ends. I'm not going to be beholden to a game that feels like a job.

Other things I like:

There doesn't appear to be any text chat and voice chat is off by default. You better believe I leave that shit turned off, and the players I get matched with probably hate me for it, but they'll just have to scream into the void. I try to be a good teammate though and use the gestures or indicators or whatever to communicate where I'm going or where enemies are.

Even with the manipulative monetization, there's no way to buy weapons or equipment with real money. Everything that affects gameplay is unlocked by playing the game. We'll see how long that lasts.

Technical performance is generally good.

Interesting aesthetic, lovely environments, cool music.

So anyone else playing it? What's the consensus?

[–] [email protected] 25 points 9 months ago

People should write their info on paper more often. Meet someone on the train, have nice conversation, "this is my stop, here's my number/insta/tiktok/whateverthekidsusethesedays, hmu if you'd like to continue this over drinks" and leave it at that. It'll be clear you've asked them out, but they don't have to decide in the moment, they don't have to reject you to your face, and they don't have to give you any personal info. You leave them in a position where they only need to take action if they're interested in talking to you again, and they don't have to expend any additional energy on you if they're not interested.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 9 months ago

never thought there would be video of this omg thank you so much meow-hug

[–] [email protected] 3 points 9 months ago

it's wild how quickly it lost me. I knew exactly what type of corporate product it would be, but the trailers made it look visually interesting, funny (the beach-off joke made me laugh shrug-outta-hecks ), and the whole idea of the Kens discovering patriarchy in the real world was pretty solid. 20 minutes in I was bored and couldn't wait for it to be over.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 9 months ago

Make other characters look straight to the camera and say "wow Witt is so witty, and smart and cunning"

barely related, but my favorite moment from Wonder Woman 1984 is when Diana Wonder Woman and Kristen Wiig Cat Lady go out for drinks and get to know each other. The scene begins with Diana Wonder Woman laughing at something we the audience didn't get to hear, says to Cat Lady, "you're so funny 😂," and the scene moves on. Like, you've got talented comedienne Kristen Wiig in your movie and you're establishing her character, and the writer (writers? I'm not looking it up) couldn't come up with a single funny thing for her to say? The entire movie is inept on every possible level but for some reason, that moment of ineptitude is the one that lodged itself in my brain.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

If someone asks for help and you're in a position to help, you help them.

[–] [email protected] 30 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

It's especially weird that companies are still like this after seeing the success of a game like Baldurs Gate 3. The runaway hit of the year, and biggest earner on Steam, doesn't even implement the basic Steam DRM. I tried it. The game launches and runs just fine when Steam isn't running at all. It's so messed up how capitalism leads to that (providing good products at fair prices and respecting your audience) being seen as an "unsustainable business model."

[–] [email protected] 8 points 10 months ago (5 children)

Cole Escola was also in Search Party. He was The Twink who kidnaps Dory in whichever season it was where she got kidnapped. Who wants to talk about what an extremely fun and deeply flawed show Search Party is?