What have you been playing and what do you think of it? 7/16/23

HollowNotion@lemmy.world to Games@lemmy.world – 90 points –

This is a topic I enjoyed seeing over at the other place, so I thought I'd try to get it going here if people are interested.

113

As usual, I managed to spend some time playing ZELDA:BotW on CEMU, for my little daughter.

She enjoys re-dressing the protagonist, having him gather edible stuff and cooking it Riding on horses, hiding before enemies, checking interesting places, or directing daddy to a black rock that hides Amber or Flint inside seems to be endless source of fun for her.

Recently, she asks to strip Link to his underpants, go to a beach and run around, picking up crabs, rocks, or climbing palm trees.

As for me, every second I can spend watching the grass bent by the virtual wind makes me forget about the reality around me. Which is more than welcome state of mind.

Started Oxenfree. Kinda a point and click mystery adventure. I'm not too far in yet but I'm enjoying the story and humor so far.

Finished Diablo 4 main story and I'm enjoying the sides quests more than the main!

I'm always playing Fallout 76. Having fun with the new quests and events.

Been playing Dragon's Dogma, I never got past getting to the main city when it first came out. I just beat the boss and now the world has completely changed so I don't think it's over yet.

I haven't even touched any of the Bitterblack Isle stuff yet so I'm sure there's still some stuff left to do.

What do you think of it? I remember when I first tried it on PS3 and thought the movement was too clunky and I just could not figure the combat out. For some reason it just did not click with me, and I ended up dying to even the simplest of enemies.

For some reason I didn't give up - the world seemed interesting I guess - and I'm glad I didn't, as one day everything just sort of clicked and I was climbing giant enemies and actually defeating them. I was having a blast and the game just sucked me in after that. It really felt I had bested it, in a way, and was now able to enjoy what it had to offer. Never got around to doing much in Bitterblack Isle, and I remember stopping shortly after the world changed, due to some stuff going on in life back then.

After seeing the surprise (atleast it was to me) announcement of Dragon's Dogma 2 and the anime, I rebought DD on Steam and am about to start it on my Steam Deck after years of not playing the game. Feels exciting!

By today's standards, I'm sure there's a lot that could be improved on in DD but I can wholeheartedly recommend trying it to anyone who hasn't played it yet. The combat is engaging, the world is interesting and I felt that the game was a breath of fresh air back when it was released.

That was what happened to me too when I first played it on the PS3. I didn't fully understand the vocation mechanic, I guess I didn't realize the effectiveness of using certain magics against enemies.

I've been playing as a Mystic Knight and blowing up everything with Great Canon and am having so much more fun than I had when I was younger.

Playing Halls of Torment. Super fun indie roguelite monster slashing game for 5 euros/dollars. It's a bit like vampire survivor but with many cool differences.

Have more fun with it than with Diablo 4.

Have more fun with it than with Diablo 4.

Got this recommended yesterday by someone who said something similar. Didn't play much yet, but I really like that the minibosses have some really interesting attack patterns.

Just got back into replaying Cyberpunk 2077 and I'm very glad a significant amount of the launch issues have been addressed. It's taken a while but it's finally playable. Still a bit upset they didn't deliver on the futuristic GTA experience I was expecting, but I'm at least having a good time.

I'd hold off playing more then. Juicehead and others have a pretty hefty update on what the future holds for the Phantom Liberty update and revamp of core systems. Sounds like they'll be bringing in a more living world akin to how people were expecting it to operate a la GTA.

https://youtu.be/xiMd37ZFvlA

Noita, the best game I can never recommend because of just how crazily deadly it is unless you know exactly what you're doing and happen to get the right perks early on. I can't say a roguelike where your 12-actual-hours-of-playing session ends with nothing to show for it just because you accidentally zapped the wrong thing out of frame that you couldn't have known was there is well-designed as a game, especially when exploration/experimentation's main reward is death. It's a very good sandbox, though.

I also got back into Risk of Rain 2. First time playing the new DLC, and I very easily managed to finish off the new content. Honestly, a bit disappointed as my favorite part of RoR2 was the unlockable items/achievement hunting and the DLC had really none of that outside of unlocking a new character and unlocking the alternative abilities for a pre-unlocked character.

Satisfactory is something I've been playing on and off. I definitely prefer Factorio's sense of danger over Satisfactory's chill, but it's still fun and has its own things going on. The more permanent bases and the fact the game is 3D makes for more fun, but I hope one day either a DLC or a mod will introduce base defense somehow.

I just finished off every achievement on Steam in Brotato. It was a fun, simple roguelike, took me a bit to grind through it. I might return to it someday, but for now it can rest.

+1 for Noita. I'm not enough of a masochist to play without the Dead isn't Dead mod. Although lately it's been freezing up on any deaths. Maybe one of these days I'll start playing it as more than a glorified physics sandbox lol.

I've wanted Noita forever, but have been so hesitant due to the whole ... dying thing!! That mod may be the answer to my fears ??

So far the mod works, but I need to sit down and confirm that mod is the one that freezes up the engine. I'm mostly playing with Fury's mod collection, but maybe it's the few extra ones that are tripping it up.

Dying can definitely be pretty painful in Noita, but the game's real joy is in exploiting all the knowledge you've gained for subsequent attempts. It's actually a fairly short game when just making an attempt on the boss without going for any extra content, so it's not difficult to get back to where you were once you know how to get there. There's also no meta-progression (with very limited exceptions) besides the knowledge you gain, which is how I prefer my roguelikes. Going in blind without any knowledge of what to expect or how the spells interact with each other and the environment is definitely going to take longer to get the first clear, but if that's not your style you can learn a lot from just watching and learning from streams of the game. DunkOrSlam was the one who really sold me on it.

My own advice would be to seriously consider running the game vanilla until you get at least your first win. But ultimately its your own experience! Do whatever you need in order to make it enjoyable. :)

I bought Elden Ring during the last Steam sale.

The world is intriguing, but there is a real plot hook missing. I still don't know the real motivation of my character after 40 hours of gameplay. The reason why I am there and why I care. It was never explained why I want to become an elden lord and what that really means. Some of the stuff will be probably explained at some point, but as I said I don't understand the motivation or why my character started the journey in the first place.

There really is not much story so far. There is probably a lot of lore hidden, but most places, events, bosses, quests etc feel disconnected or shallow. I really would love to pick up some of the books in all the places, but that's not possible. As I said the world is intriguing, but it is probably all just cryptic stuff with many blanks left. Lore wise it can't be all a big mystery and it doesn't feel like most of it is, but it is never conveyed to the player.

The world is beautiful, there are many weird places. Having the big glowing tree in the background is an amazing set piece in an otherwise grim dark world.

Gameplay wise the progression feels really slow and it is hard to change the playstyle due to limited resources early on. I am unsure if I like that yet. It doesn't invite the player to try out some of the new toys you find though which is a bummer.

Besides that it is the first real Souls like I got into and the difficulty seems reasonable. The lack of quick saves is an interesting design choice. Every failure hits a bit harder, but it also inhibits experimentation.

I can't really explain why I like this game, but so far I am having fun. The world looks and feels great, the gameplay is fun. It's just the story or storytelling aspect of the game which could be so much better.

Also doing Elden Ring, but I've also done every souls game up to it. This game is Dark Souls through and through, but with the open world and a few slight mechanical additions. Otherwise it's the same.

The thing with souls games is the world kind of tells the story, and gives you bits and pieces to puzzle together along the way. The idea is to just do the damn thing and soak it all in along the way.

I'm about 60hrs in and also don't totally know what's going on, but can see more pieces coming together. But remember, souls games are very much journey over destination.

If you want to see a master class in environmental storytelling, though; play Bloodborne.

I don't know. All I am thinking is that games like Fallout do a much better job with environmental story telling. Also many blanks are filled by diary entries, manifests, dialog etc. You can learn a lot about most locations and the people that lived or worked there. Literally nothing even close to that was to be found in any of the locations I visited in Elden Ring.

Same for the Witcher where you figure things out and learn about the monsters. Every enemy feels so much more impactful than random monster 164 in Elden Ring.

I have a feeling that it is partly a very intended different style, but it is also an excuse to skip writing much lore. Just hint at some stuff and people will fill the blanks for you in hour long explanation videos. The world does not feel alive though or real. It is hollow.

Otherwise it seems to be a great game, it is just the storytelling aspect which is pretty bad for RPG standards. The world is interesting, but my curiosity is never rewarded.

Not trying to be funny, but the characters motivation feels the same as Pokemon Red/Blue. Just become the very best just for the sake of it. I really really hope I am wrong, because that would be an absolutely disappointing conclusion or rather lack of it.

Fair assessment. Though I'm not all the way through yet, I do know there is a massive amount of lore in the game, and a lot I've already personally read through in game. One big place a lot of people seem to miss with Souls games as far as the lore is item descriptions. Each item has a basic description, then a way more detailed description on a separate menu (PS5 you hit the square button to get the detailed description). The items you get along the way are a huge part of the lore.

Between that and talking to Gideon and a few others, I feel like I have a good baseline. I expect a lot more to come in the areas I'm about to tackle.

All that said: I'm a huge RPG fan and love a story-driven game. But that is not at all my motivation for playing any Souls game. It's all about the gameplay; that super rewarding game loop that they have mastered.

Dave the diver is main game right now. Just started chapter 2.

I never played botw as i went pc gaming back then. So i got botw and totk setup on my deck. They are next

Dave the diver creative strategy meeting:

Okay what if we also...

Playing bits and pieces of a lot of stuff and nothing’s really sticking. It’s frustrating, haha.

Replaying Control because I never got around to the DLC back in the day, and I want to play it before Alan Wake 2 comes out. This is my main game right now, but I’m just slowly picking away at it.

Diablo IV - omnipresent side-game for me. It’s grindy, and repetitive, and the end game and itemization need work, but I enjoy the combat so it’s been a good podcast game.

Dave the Diver - Great game, but where I’m at currently it’s become more mission-focused than I’d prefer. Still liking it, but my progress has slowed quite a bit.

The Rift Breaker - Picked this up in the Steam sale. It’s fun, if a little confusing sometimes. The UI could use some work.

Yet Another Zombie Survivors - Despite the terrible name, this one’s actually pretty fun. I’ve played an absolute ton of these things and some are more interesting than others… being able to add 2 members to your squad, as well as some of the abilities and stuff, make this one stand apart a bit. At least for a couple hours of mindless fun.

Voidigo, Revita, Crab Champions, Dropsy, and Going Under (among others, honestly) are some more that are rotating in and out as I try to find something that I’ll stick with for a bit, but nothing’s scratching the itch so far.

+1 for Control. Finished it and the DLC not too long ago, awesome game and Remedy is one of the more exciting studios in gaming right now

I've been playing the GBA Collection on Nintendo switch. I had emulators but this is finally a legal way to play fire emblem, Metroid and Mario kart super circuit on the switch without hassle.

It's basically the best thing that could happen ever. Now if I can just figure out how to enable the multiplayer it would be a blast

Final Fantasy 16 - I haven't had a lot of time to play it lately, but really enjoying it. Story and world feel like classic SNES era Final Fantasy, but darker, a little more adult. Graphics are great, it's a beautiful game and looks next gen. And the gameplay is fine... It's just button mashing, casting spells from range over and over till you finally stagger a powerful enemy, or a quick time event. But it does feel like an action beat-em-up taking place within a Final Fantasy world. Would love if it were more turn based, or at least party based like FF7 Remake, but it's fine. Good game so far 👍

The game has the highest high points in any game in recent memory for me. The only thing that makes it a 9/10 in my eyes is the slower sidequest-esque missions sometimes inserted into the main quest, and the lack of any real RPG elements

There is a method to the madness in the game wants you to think of your abilities like a DPS MMO rotation.

Also your damage from the helm splitter scales with height.

For example, the thunder ball + will of wisps creates just a constantly pulsing ball of damage. Then add on any other moves done. Don't forget your dog can jump in on the last hit of your base attack string.

Slay the Spire - damn fucking addicting game, sometimes infuriating and sometimes a dopamine rush, it's just feels so good when you play your cards right

CrossCode - I'm still at the beginning (just got my first party member) and I fell in love with it almost instantly. The dialogue is funny and the combat is chef's kiss. Shout out to Lea's legendary face reactions

Hardspace Shipbreaker. I play open shift mode because I'm old and slow and have nothing to prove. I love the music and just taking my time and getting into the flow zone with it. There's a half-decent story about worker exploitation, etc., going on with it but I pay little attention to the story in games. I'm here to play not watch a streaming series. Fortunately you can do other stuff during a lot of it, though they do have some unskippable cut scenes, which I am never a fan of.

Haven't played recently but it's a great game. In also play in open shift mode, it's nice to just chill out and disassemble some spaceships

Bought Star Citizen and my god is it really good. Initially I assumed it wouldn't due to everything I read but man those articles are usually out the date. The recent update added a lot and seemed to have fixed a lot. There are still quite a few bugs, but most you run into will not prevent you from playing the game.

I've been playing my way through and enjoying Pokemon Unbound, one of the most amazing Pokemon rom hacks to have been created. It's a rom hack with a custom region, custom story, and amazing customization in settings. It even manages to have a difficult mode that is challenging without being grindy bullshit.

I'm doing a "soft nuzlocke" of the game, where I can only capture one Pokemon a route, and my Pokemon don't die- instead, when I wipe, the entire run ends. It's a lot more forgiving and fun way to play Pokemon while making it a little bit more challenging. Would recommend trying any Pokemon game this way, and would especially recommend Pokemon Unbound whether you're a casual or experienced Pokemon player.

Divinity: Original Sin 2, Grounded, and the first Plants Vs. Zombies game. I think they're all fantastic games. Divinity is D&D the video game essentially, I've been playing with my other half and we're both having a blast. We completed the first game a couple of years ago and it was great so the sequel was an easy pick. Grounded is Honey, I Shrunk the Kids the video game, also really good multiplayer, but it does kick players pretty often regardless of internet connection. PVZ, it was cheap on Steam and it's got a surprsing amount of content for the price. Very fun little time waster.

A while ago, i would have agreed about Divinity. Now? I think Baldur's Gate 3 makes Divinity look like D&D The Video Game: The Alpha

I've been finally playing Divinity: Original Sin 2 while I'm waiting for Baldur's Gate 3 to come out and I've been having an absolute blast. ATM I'm scraping the last nooks and crannies of Reaper's Coast before continuing forward.

I can't recommend Ender Lillies on steam enough, it's a 1-2 years old overall great (although very melancholic) Metroidvania with an interesting story, nice music and pretty good combat. Really got me for a few days, even went to 100 procent the playthrough which i rarely do

I've been rotating between Tears of the Kingdom, which I've been greatly enjoying in short bursts for its exploration and how easy it is to change scenery or style as I play, Animal Crossing: New Horizons, which I've been playing again after getting my wife in to the game, and Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap on an emulator while I'm out and about.

Each game has definitely been scratching a different itch, and it's been a great improvement in my long term enjoyment of each to rotate between them. I used to no-life a game until I finished it or burned out. Now I'm loving three games and don't feel like garbage when I set them down to live my life.

Call of Duty: Cold War.

It's free on PS+. It's the only game I've played for the PS5 that actually supports full mouse and keyboard, too, which is cool.

Crazy how I used to not really like COD because it was so arcadey, and now that is the one thing that makes it more appealing than most other modern shooters currently with large, active playerbases.

I still have a lot of the same critisms I always had about this series though. Most of the maps are garbage. The constant barrage of sounds and popups is irritating and distracting from the fun. The gunplay feels too samey for every weapon, and "aim" is a joke given how not only aim assistance works, but also how little spread and recoil there is to compensate for when aiming down sights to where everything but a shotgun feels like a laser beam. And the god awful netcode that can have you getting killed from a dude right in front of you that never appeared on your screen until after you were dead.

Just bought way too much stuff over the Steam sale.

  • American Truck Simulator. Finally bought the newest map DLC for it (Texas, Oklahoma), and installed quite a few truck/car/map mods for it. Fun to just... drive. Deliveries can be quite challenging. Also dip into ETS2 ever so often. Road style and architecture is quite a nice change of pace. Play primarily in VR with full lowkey sim-rig.
  • Project Zomboid. Too good and too many mods. Fun to just see how long I can roam around in an RV or Jaap Nomad :P
  • Dying Light. Played the hell out of this pirated last year, finally bought it with all the extra DLC. Worth it.
  • Noita. Got back into watching FuryForged and his insane playthroughs. Can't decide it it's more fun to watch or play.
  • Dead Cells. Haven't dipped my toes into Soulsborne style gaming much, as I rather like a more relaxed "I'm in danger but not always gonna die", but the difficulty here is nice. The art style really drew me in too.
  • Control. Stuck at the Benicoff TV / Salvador battle, but overall really enjoying it. Downside is I'm having to play the pirated version due to 505's screw-up with the "Ultimate Edition" fuckup with Humble.
  • Voidigo. Fun & very colorful roguelite twitch shooter. Animations wonderful and all characters are top notch, weapon variety is vast.

Death Stranding on Game Pass. I'm about 60 hrs in and it's really different, the good kind

Finishing Final Fantasy 16 as we speak. Enjoying the story, reminiscent of the stories from the 2D games. Game play feels like hack n slash meets fighting game, which can be repetitive but engaging.

Edit: realized I made it sound like I didn't like. It's far from the classic game play but that's to be expected. I think they nailed the game play for this. It made it feel more cinematic and epic.

The gameplay is almost there. If they added a pause string and a few more moves to Clive's base it would be perfect.

I picked back up Team Fortress 2 a few weeks ago, and have been playing it often since. An update for the game came out a bit ago which pumped up the playercount, and it's been a lot of fun playing on the new maps added (pd_selbyen seal my beloved). I may not really like how Valve is pumping the game for mtx while barely maintaining it, but I can enjoy what we do get. Still playing Pyro, Spy, Medic mostly, trying to learn how to play Demoman again.

Been playing BattleBit Remastered with some friends on and off too. I'm definitely not as good at this one, but I'm having fun with the massive 127v127 mode. Went on a massive killstreak with an RPG, with my friend constantly dropping ammo boxes so I could get more rockets.

Finished Yakuza: Like a Dragon a few weeks ago, really liked the vibe. The whole Yakuza collection came up for sale on GOG right after I finished, so I’m going through the whole series now. Almost done with Yakuza 0, and it hasn’t disappointed. The graphics and UI are dated, but it’s easy to get past that. The storytelling is what’s so great about these games. They’re long, complex, and surprisingly thoughtful. Sure there’s a good amount of trite cringeworthy tropes, but that’s part of the fun. Oh and the minigames! Business management is almost as fun as the main game…and I love that you can play classic sega arcade games in-game!

You have a long and wonderful journey ahead of you!

In my opinion Y0 looks better than LAD, at least on PS5

Yeah, I can totally see what you mean. I was definitely underwhelmed by Like a Dragon’s graphics. Lately I’ve been a lot more forgiving of old/crappy graphics though, especially with how gripping these stories are.

Wasteland 3. I like it a lot more than Divinity Original Sin 2 so far. The DOS2 plot just doesn't resonate with me. But I do miss the battle initiative order of DOS.

Galactic Ruler. May be more complicated than Distant Worlds 2 or X4 Foundations. It seems to do more stuff (like having planet maps and gameplay) but the UI is challenging. Even just selecting a ship to give orders takes too many clicks IMO.

Days Gone. Great blend of open world exploration, stories, and combat. Very well done game, if you like Far Cry 5 you'd probably like this too.

Borderlands 3, got this for free, enjoyable enough but if you played the other Borderlands this is more of the same. Too many gun choices and too much looting, but some of the guns are pretty amusing, like one that when you reload you throw the mag and it deploys into a turret.

Endless Minecraft with the kids. My youngest is graduating from creative so I'm learning all the new features from the last few versions.

Always playing Kenshi. Easily one of my favourite games and so replay-able, especially with its awesome modding community.

Trying to get into Diablo4. I do really enjoy it but it's just not grabbing me like I had hoped. Keep wanting to replay Grimdawn.

Currently addicted to Transport Fever 2, its like I launch the game and BOOM 5 hours goes by

I'm having a hard time getting hooked on anything. Still playing OSRS afk, doing my farming contracts Daily.

Started assassin's creed 3 but it's not amazing. Been playing fable 1 but it's also a bit rough.

All very easily explained by having a 4month old kid, 2year old kid, and a full time job though:p

I beat Planet of Lana. Fun indie game with wonderful art style and music. Gameplay could’ve been a bit more complex especially with puzzles but still very enjoyable.

I enjoyed it as well (and it's on Game Pass)! Reminded me of Inside, FAR Lone Sails, etc. Didn't quite live up to those, but still solid!

Actually playing Exoprimal and it's... Good. Better than expected, honestly. It's got some pacing issues (among others) and practically forces you to play for 5 hours or so to get more content, but man. The father you get in the story, the better it gets (gameplay wise, but story is also good imo). Also noteworthy: except server issues (not that common tough, for me) I haven't got any bugs or glitches, at least none I remember. Kind of a rare sight these days

I'm playing Days Gone on PS5. I've unlocked the second part of the world and by now I'm really hooked. It took some time but I'm starting to get a hang of it.

The world is actually quite immersive because of all the mechanics it has. You scavenge, you clear areas, you engage with random encounters, you progress in the story, you fix your bike and refuel it. It's a bit like Death Stranding in a way.

And unlike Ubisoft formula, this one is genuinely different. It feels like an alternate reality of Ubisoft's approach (I say Ubisoft but Ghost of Tsushima, Horizon and maybe even Spider-Man follow similar formula). Nests, camps and nero points all feel very different from yet another outpost with alarms and a leader, and enemy variety is pretty decent. So far it's quite fresh.

Story and dialogues are a bit meh, it sounds like the protagonist is muttering post sex lol, but once you go along with it and believe the narrative, it's pretty alright and consistent.

The graphics are really good, I mean I can't believe PS4 was able to handle this game, the clutter and draw distances are really impressive. One thing I really hate is the loading times the game has, I wish they could release a native port to fix that or it had activity cards at the very least.

Overall I'm really enjoying it.

Got Pizza Tower from the summer sale and I’m hooked. Incredibly well polished game from start to finish. Even listening to the OST on Spotify while I’m working. Going for all P ranks right now.

After a tip here on Lemmy, I added the Space Exploration mod to Factorio. Great tip, as it adds a lot of new things to an already great base game.

Been loving Tears of the Kingdom lately. It has great exploration and traversal but some of the dungeons have been really weak compared to the previous games.

I never played BotW and one of the big reasons why is the weapon breaking mechanic. I thought I would really hate it but the fuse ability gives you an infinite supply of good weapons so it pretty much cancels it out.

What Comes After and Stardew Valley on the Switch.

Cult of the Lambs on Xbox One

Lots of Warframe. I still have lots to collect and 8 more MR to MR30 so I'll probably be at it for a while.

Halls of Torment. I both love it and hate it, in the same way I do Vampire Survivors and Brotato.

Have replayed BG3s early access yet again. I just want the full thing to be out, can't think of any other game.

Is it a hard game? I really want to grab it in August, but I'm worried I'm going to be skill locked early on. Is there a story difficulty or the like?

Just finished up Tunic and Pictooi this weekend. Next up is going the be Advance Wars Reboot, I think.

With the usual smattering of Vampire Survivors and Brotato when I just have a little time available. Thanks Steam Deck for making the possible!

I had a falling out with a friend recently so I went to a happy place... Modded Minecraft. E6E in particular.

What I think of it? Uuuuugggg... Somehow I blink and it's already 4am.

Recently got Lobotomy Corporation from a friend with the message "welcome to the cult". Now I'm addicted and I'm managing my nuggets even in my dreams. Send help.

On one of my random rimworld kicks right now.

Same here. Just started a fresh colony but this time I added some WH40K mods to spice it up.

Now I got VOID and Waaaagh's running amok.

WH40k mods sound like a blast! I'll have to check them out for my next playthrough.

I just played through the Arkham games and both Spiderman games. They were all fantastic and now I'm finally playing Elden Ring again. The steamdeck has really given me the motivation to play some of the games in my 300+ library that I've been neglecting.

CrossCode. It is such a great game. I am quite a pseudo-MMORPG enjoyer.

Me and my friends are getting back into Hunt: showdown it's still so good and the new event is a lot of fun, fighting gators in a thunderstorm is just enjoyable.

I bought Doom Eternal on summer sale. It's an ok game but Im actually partially bored playing the campaign.

It looks great but I'm not a fan of the forced chainsawing to get ammo. The feeling of constantly needing to change your weapon for each monster is mostly frustrating and not fun actually.

The campaign experience seems to be "die 30 times while killing the monsters in this area" followed by "die 30 times figuring out how to jump across cliffs to get where you need".

I guess the real fun is in player vs player so will try that later.

I'll give em credit: they tried something new. FPS and even boomer shooter genre has gotten stale lately and Doom 16 was their "back to roots" release. A Doom 16-2 wouldn't have done so well.

I enjoyed it, but at the same time this isn't exactly the next evolution of the FPS, more of a side branch that needed exploring.

I recently played CloudPunk. The voxel art feels weird at first but you get used to it. It's a fantastic game and the story is good. 5/5.

My wife and have been playing the hell out of Diablo 4 (no pun intended). It has just enough elements from D2 that characters feel open and alive but is accessible enough for my wife (who would not have liked D2) to enjoy trying to come up with new builds.

Season 1 starts in two days and I'm very excited.

Other than that I've been playing Curse The Case of the Golden Idol. It is a sequel of sorts to Obra Dinn, but done in smaller scenarios that can be completed in 30 minutes or so each. I love going from what the hell is happening here too understanding fully all the implications in that time. Really feels like detective work.

Edit: don't even know the name of the game I'm playing haha

Diablo IV couch coop is awesome.
The story is fun, over the top, dramatic, brutal. We played through it and I only wish it wasn't always online. So many moment were ruined by lag. Season 1 is about to be released but the game still lags like it's on dial-up.

I've been playing a lot of core keeper with a friend, it's pretty fun. They've added a lot of content since we had last played so we started a new save. It's a great sandboxy 2d adventure and exploration game, worth checking out.

Lately, ive gotten back into cities:skylines. The hype for cs2 got me in the mood for a good city builder.

Other than that, mainly just civ6 when im in the mood for somewhat mindless clicking & transport fever 2 for when i feel motivated to hardcore concentrate on optimization..

Grabbed Project Zomboid last week and it's kicking my butt. I'm admittedly making it harder on myself by starting a whole new save when a character dies, but I'm trying to figure it out without relying on too many crutches. Still pretty enjoyable even with the difficulty.

I play a lot of WoW private servers. I'm currently on the wow hc private server. It's a small server but seems stable and friendly people. When I have free time on my phone I've been running through pokemon unbound on my GBA emulator. It's a romhack for fire red I think. Interesting story. Like the old-school 2d graphics and original story.

Been a while since I was on a private server, might check it out!

I've been enjoying Diablo IV for the most part. There is just something about huge open world games that are slightly repetitive that relaxes me. Well, as much as you can be relaxed in a game about defeating demons lol.
I almost didn't buy D4 in the first place, but I figured if I spent anywhere as many hours in D4 as I did in D3, the money would be worth it. Plus I had the very pleasant surprise of finding out that one of my favorite voice actors, Anthony Howell, plays one of the antagonists, Elias.
The only real issue I have with it is the server lagging in the evening as more people hop on. It gets a bit frustrating trying to walk somewhere and then rubber banding back to your original spot three or four times, or being in the middle of combat and everything straight up freezing. I generally have pretty good patience when it comes to video games, but holy shit it gets me close to rage quitting.

In between Diablo runs, I've been replaying the Amnesia series. I absolutely love the first two games, The Dark Descent and A Machine for Pigs, but I haven't played enough of the third, Rebirth, to say if I really like it or not. I know they just came out with another installment called The Bunker, but I think I might wait until another sale comes around to nab it.

At the moment, I'm actually only playing two games. I play Trackmania 2020 every day, the game is great because it is populated with content from the community to a very large extent. Every day, a new map is added to the game, on which a tournament is officially played every day. Furthermore, there are so many tracks built by other players that you will probably never have played all the maps.

And then I still play WoW Classic and WotLK - the game has actually been following me since 2004 and has not let me go since then...

Shoutouts to TM2020. I somehow missed that games release until it came around to Steam not that long ago. I loved me some TMNF and TM2 so its been a real joy to dive back in.

Got State of Decay 2 a few weeks ago and have been playing it whenever I have time. Love games with permadeath and resource management, if you're into that check it out. I'd also recommend if you like permadeath in things like XCOM, I've had some miserable moments losing characters lol

Been replaying The Outer Worlds and some No Man's Sky as I await Starfield. TOW is just as good as I remembered, and NMS is still a chill time suck that I can "space" out to.

Nier Replicant

I reached ending A, and I'm finally beginning to see interesting differences in the current route. Finally got my Dualsense controller to work via Bluetooth on pc as well

I've been playing this mobile game called Super Mombo Quest It's a fun platformer :)