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Tycho

Okay, you Capcom bastards.  We’ll bite on this Steel Battalion thing.

I had resolved myself to be opposed to it, which never works.  I saw it at the last E3, and it played like a fairly standard mech game.  That’s not to say that it didn’t have a certain charm.  It has a convincing, World War II cinema look and feel, and had World War II been waged by gargantuan vertical tanks this might very well be footage of that conflict.  The game looks fine.  I don’t doubt that it will be amusing enough, if a bit predictable.  So what would make us split the cost of something like this?  There are those among you who know the answer.

From the first, I knew that the custom controller was novelty run amok - which is why I endeavored to mount resistance.  I wouldn’t be claimed by it.  Based only on my E3 experience, I might have been able to hold out.  I even had Gabe to back me up, and I figured we could weather this shit.  When we got our hands all over the controller at that Xbox Live thing, though, for an extended period of time, it made an impression. 

There were two things that finally urged me into this ridiculous purchase, and I’ll admit that they aren’t terribly robust - they’re utter pretext.  First, if the stick was for a single game, I might not entertain the acquisition.  However, as a sequel with full online support is already confirmed, that mitigates the issue somewhat.  Second - and hopefully this is still true - if you die in your ‘mech without first flipping up the guard on the eject button and launching yourself to safety, it deletes your saves game.  Ha!  I endorse that kind of depravity. 

The EB site changed a bunch of dates this morning, so it’s hard to know if these games are coming out today or tomorrow.  Either way, I’m in a world of hurt:

A game that really intrigued me from E3, Robot Alchemical Drive isn’t really like anything else that I know of.  Think about most games that sport the big robots.  You tend to take the role of the robot itself, so your scale is drawn by comparisons to your environment - usually some lackluster buildings or gigantic mountains or you’re in space so it’s hard to tell.  RAD is the exact opposite of that.  Your perspective is largely drawn from a single human being, i.e. you, and you are controlling inconceivably large robots by way of a remote control.  And I don’t just mean controlling them forward, back, left or whatever.  You control individual limbs, the machines are like puppets that siege modern cities.  It was such a neat concept that I’m glad some company decided to run with it. 

My secret desire, Starfleet Command III appears to be mixing up the formula a bit.  With RPG style crew members that gain experience and refine skills, what they say is a streamlined interface, and ships drawn from modern Trek mythology, it’s not something I can stay away from.  I loved the first game, with its inscrutable interface that exposed massive functionality at the expense of 1d20 San, but I am curious to see if anything is lost in the simplification.  I skipped the second iteration of this series, as it seemed like the interesting Dynamic Universe option would never materialize.  I don’t know if it ever did, and now it’s not relevant. 

I wrote a long piece about Phantom Crash, but this was when we didn’t really have enough server and the news script ate it.  To summarize, Phantom Crash is one of many extremely beautiful, extremely promising games en route from mysterious publisher Phantagram Interactive, who I have never heard of before.  Who the hell are these guys?  We may never know.  I’ve heard the game is a MIXED BAG, so readers unsettled by the prospect of bags would do well to avoid this one.  I’m in for the luscious visuals, mech building, the joyful use of English common to non-native speakers.  You might think I’m making fun, but I crave that shit.  The interfaces are dense with style and info, to say nothing of cats.  They have a video that shows off the customization options to a catchy tune I’m humming even now.  Yeah!

So now, Gabe is playing Final Fantasy X, and I’m lusting after Ratchet and Clank.  It’s a bizarre reversal but I’m okay with it.  We came away from (here it comes again) E3 with a demo of this Ratchet game, which we thought was fantastic.  People keep working that PS2 hardware, and the moment I think it may have passed into irrelevance technically somebody shuts me up.  Massive, colorful, active worlds that will make any proponent of the platform genre titter.  The demo we had was also pretty amusing, which I guess I didn’t expect.  Like Banjo Kazooieieie, Ratchet wears this little Clank character on his back, where Clank has all kinds of enjoyable idle animations.  There is one where Clank appears surprised that he has hands, and I never thought about it before now but hands are pretty weird.

(CW)TB out.

in the tidal destruction

Tycho

But I just learned about it, so it is conceivable that I’m not the only one.

XBConnect ain’t a bad piece of software.  Like Gamespy’s Xbox Tunnel, XBConnect lets you host and join Xbox games online.  Both of these products could be seen as alternatives to purchasing Xbox Live - I brought this up when I talked to Microsoft actually, and they didn’t seem too worried about this sort of technology.  They see the benefits of voice and content downloads as being fairly significant reccomendations for their service. 

Oh, and that’s another thing.  I heard this fucked up rumor that a version of Halo with Live support was coming soon.  That would lend credence to those “Halo 1.5” rumors that were out there for a while, but I haven’t heard this verified anywhere else, so keep your expectations low.

(CW)TB

Tycho

I just played on a server that ran so well I figured the patch must be out, and I was right.  It’s almost like a new game, and anyone who played it before and after the patch will know that isn’t an exaggeration.

(CW)TB

Gabe

I know for a fact that there are human beings out there who are playing Capcom vs SNK 2: E.O. on Xbox Live right this very minute. Even as I type this there is someone someplace delivering Rock’s devastating Double Reppuken. While it’s true that I too have an Xbox Live beta account I am forced to play football which I guess is a sport, or some motorcycle racing game where you crash all the time. I do not know what these lucky bastards did to get their hands on this game early but part of me hates them for it. The other part of me though wants them to mail me and tell me all about it. 

If you made a donation to Club PA in October but still have not received your Over Easy pages please let me know.

-Gabe out

Gabe

I just have a quick favor to ask of everyone. As you can see one of our sponsors this month is actually Netflix. I am betting that a large number of you actually already have Netflix accounts like myself. For those of you who don’t, Netflix is a place where you can rent DVD’s and they send them right to your fucking house along with a little envelope to send them back in when you finish watching them. Kara and I have been using it for a few months now and its pretty slick. You just make up a big list of movies you want and every time you send one back they just send you the next one on your list, no late fees or anything. They’ve got all kinds of shit too, new releases, foreign junk and even some good anime so it’s not like their selection sucks. No games though, which kinda sucks but hey it’s not my company. Anyway, it would help us out this month if some of you guys and gals would be so kind as to click on one of their ads over there and sign up for the free trial they are offering. Whether or not you keep the service or you cancel after the trial I really don’t care. Like I said before Kara and I like it, but you know whatever. So if you could do that we here at the arcade would really appreciate it. If not you know that’s cool too, it’s not like I’m your Dad.

-Gabe out

Tycho

I’m showing like a hundred thousand uniques today in the Goddamn server logs.  Are there a hundred thousand people in the whole world?

(CW)TB