Lord of Corvo Bianco

This morning is a day of reckoning. I’ve been on vacation since the 20th of December and in that amount of time you can really screw up your sleep schedule. Though over the last few days I have made failed attempts to reintroduce getting up at a specific time, this morning and the day as a whole is going to suck. This holiday was a dual edged sword in that I spent most of it sick, but because of that I also spent most of it gaming. Over the course of this extended break I poured 80 hours worth of game time into The Witcher 3 and have reached a point where I am happy to walk away from it having seen how the main story plays out and having knocked out most of the Heart of Stone and Blood and Wine expansion content. Blood and Wine specifically was fantastic because I absolutely adore the Duchy of Toussaint. I love my Vineyard and it helped give me a sense of ownership in the setting as I explored it.

Sometimes my brain works in a specific pattern where I end up going all in on something. Anyone who has engaged me in a Destiny lore conversation will understand what I am talking about because I sometimes get obsessed with things. Right now I am decades late becoming obsessed with the world of the Witcher and as a result I have started reading the novels. I don’t read particularly quickly and I tend to read before bed and as a result a chapter or two at a time. That said I am slowly chewing my way through The Last Wish which seemingly based on the consensus of sources I found was the proper starting point to this series, and also more or less what the Netflix show has been drawing from. I’m still on the first of the short stories but probably about halfway through it at this point.

As far as Witcher 3, I have to admit it is a little depressing to be walking away from it. I mean I could keep playing it and whittling down the remaining tasks that I have or collecting the last few Gwent cards that I am missing. That said when I reach the “endgame” for a single player game it just feels hollow. I know that all of those NPCs that I love will never gain new dialog lines and will just more or less sit there as a testament to the fact that the world is forever frozen with no new adventures to be had. I may at some point start New Game Plus to see if that is any different, but really I left the game in a good spot and am more or less happy with the various conclusions. There is only one thing that I might have tweaked but it was not worth the back tracking required to change the way something played out. Also I am just going to throw this out there… but Triss is infinitely better than Yennefer. Maybe the books will change my opinion, but Triss is a delight to be around and Yen basically treats Geralt like shit all the time.

In my tradition of doing everything the wrong way… I spent yesterday trying to find the next game to play and wound up falling back into Witcher 2. There is no way I will ever be able to complete the first game because it just feels like crap, and while it was suggested that I remap everything to a controller… that isn’t how I way to play it either. I would love to see someone do a complete port of the first game to the Witcher 3 engine. In the meantime however I have watched a few Witcher 1 recap videos and more or less understand what happens. Witcher 2 is way more sluggish befitting the era in which it was released, but I do think I will be able to get used to it. The pacing is just more slow than I had expected and it is frustrating dealing with all of the invisible walls that appear to be everywhere to keep your character from getting out of bounds. I am interested however in seeing how the story plays out, so more than likely this is what I will be playing for the next bit.

The weirdest thing about all of this is that I always thought that the Witcher universe is one that I would enjoy, but for various reasons I struggled to gain purchase. In some ways it is too reliant upon the source material because it expects you also to be obsessed with things in order to actually understand what the hell is going on. I’ve talked about this before, but the game absolutely throws you down conversation trees where you are expected to know who the hell someone is and are going to be struggling to pull together context clues as you go or make a trip out to the wikipedia page in order to sort out just why the hell we know who this Regis guy is for example. That said because it draws so deep upon an existing work, it means there is an absolute wealth of interesting characters to draw upon and I chose that specific example because I love him so much.

The witcherverse is a bit of a slog to get into, but having recently been indoctrinated into the cult of the white wolf… it really is worth the effort. The truth is had I not watched the Netflix series I probably would have bounced again. That is not to say that it is required viewing, but it did give me enough of a primer to feel like I could understand at least the layout of the world and how the various kingdoms fit together. It also helped that as I dug further into the Witcher 3, there were places and events that were brought up that I saw in the series giving me a bit of a rope ladder to try and climb towards understanding. At this point… I would probably suggest just starting with the 3rd game as the first is an unplayable mess and the second seems to have some pacing and user interface issues especially in the quest advisement area. I’ve spent way too long figuring out what the hell I am supposed to be doing already and have yet to clear the first area. The third one while it absolutely drops you off a cliff and expects you to learn to swim on the way down.. it does present itself in a familiar interface that is easy for any MMORPG player or someone who has played a modern open world game to understand.

AggroChat #282 – 2019 Games of the Year Show

Featuring: Ammo, Ashgar, Belghast, Grace, Tamrielo and Thalen

It is that time again, time for another games of the year show.  As is usually the case we fire up a google form and have each member of the AggroChat cast pick their top 5 picks for the year.  This then gets collated into the final list that we talked about during the show. This time around we had thirteen different titles to talk about, with the highest voted title getting 5 different votes from staff members.  Since we have talked at length about most of these games, the resulting discussion ends up being more a trip down memory lane than a deep dive.

Topics Discussed:

  • 2019 Games of the Year Show
    • Trials of Mana
    • Anthem
    • The Outer Worlds
    • Devil May Cry 5
    • Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice
    • World of Warcraft Classic
    • Greedfall
    • Fire Emblem: Three Houses
    • Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night
    • Jedi Fallen Order
    • Untitled Goose Game
    • Baba Is You
    • Final Fantasy XIV: Shadowbringers

The Original Blog Post on AggroChat.com

Lost in Novigrad

Today is the last day of my holiday break, and it is around this point that I realize I did nothing but play games, or in this case one specific game. I am not sure if I care that this was the case since I spent most of the break fighting some sort of bronchitis nonsense. Holiday break has been one of those times when I dive into particular long games. During one such break I replayed all of Mass Effect starting from the first game carrying the save forward to the third game. This time around after having watched and loved the Netflix series, I dove headlong into playing The Witcher 3. I realize I probably should have started with the second game, but I also don’t think I would have stuck with it had I done so.

Witcher 3 is a weird game that seems to give no care what soever for you being confused about the setting. It is a game that more or less expects you to have either played the first two games or have read some of the novels. This makes it deeply enjoyable for those who have, but also extremely obtuse for someone who has not. I remember the first time I played the game some years back I bounced pretty heavily because it felt like I had no investment in the setting and was immediately being told that I love this woman enough to try and jump through a bunch of hoops to go find her, The Netflix series however gave me enough of a grounding in the setting to be able to start to care about how intricately crafted this world is.

To date I have spent 77 hours wandering the backwoods of the northern kingdoms, and I am completely hooked on the world. The Witcher 3 is among the most interesting and intricately crafted roleplaying game experiences I have ever participated in. I even tried my best to go back and get a foothold into the original Witcher game, but again didn’t make it super far thanks to the awful interface. I do however think I will be able to play the second game now, since I remember my key problem with it has been it did not like alt tabbing and I have other solutions to work around that. I’m even contemplating starting on the novels because I want to know more about this rich setting and the characters within it.

I don’t want to go into anything even vaguely close to spoiler territory because this is a game that I feel everyone should experience for themselves. I will say however that for a game that released in 2015, the game still looks phenomenal. Like I am not sure if I have another game that looks anywhere near as good as this one does in 4k. All of this gives me extreme hope for what Cyperpunk might end up being like to play, but really… I just want CD Project Red to get that game finished so they can create another epic set in the Witcher universe.

GOG Galaxy 2.0

Over the last few days I have been using a thing and I thought I would sit down and talk about it this morning. I’ve known about Good Ole Games or GOG as they refer to themselves these days for years. They were a handy shop for buying old games that came with dosbox pre-configured to launch without horrible side effects. At some point they launched the Galaxy Client an it was “fine”. It did the job and presented any games I happened to own on that platform in a pleasant manner. The only game I really owned through GoG was Witcher 3, and only then because a download code came with a video card I had purchased. Since GoG is now owned by CD Project Red it makes sense that they would be handing out OEM codes through their official storefront. To be truthful I had the client installed but I never spent much time with it… that is until I was made aware of some significant changes.

Once upon a time there was a thing called Raptr and I loved the way it kept track of my games played. In part a bit of the reason why I started manually tracking games played in each month was because I was no longer using Raptr. The client reached a point where they integrated way too much stuff into it and it seemed to be a bit of a drag on my system. Over the last several days I have seen a bunch of these cross-platform gaming stats showing up on social media, but I think the first one I remember seeing was my friend Maeka. This lead me down a path of trying to see what had changed with GoG and being pleasantly surprised. The challenge with the client is the fact that I am already heavily bough into the Steam store and the inertia tying me there is strong and mostly keeps me from ever wanting to buy a game elsewhere as steam has served as a single launchpad for all of my games.

Seeing this as a problem, it appears that GoG has worked hard on trying to come up with the answer. Instead of creating yet another walled garden of exclusive content, they went the opposite direction and have created a client that seemingly integrates with everything else. Now I have this single pleasant interface that delivers up all of the content that exists regardless of the store front. This is the point where you are just about to tell me “but Bel, Nvidia Experience already does this and offers graphical configuration options”, and that is absolutely true. However what GoG does is give me back some of that Raptr functionality of tracking the time played and achievements earned from every single game on the list and allowing me to see what my friends are also playing.

The activity feed has been real awkward over the last several days as folks on-board their way into the platform and it catalogs the past decade worth of gaming. However past that initial set up phase as people find out about GoG Galaxy 2.0, it then becomes a valuable way of seeing what my friends happen to be doing. I would love to see them integrate with something like Player.me or maybe just outright buy them to add some of the missing social features. Like when a friend earns a hard achievement I would love to be able to do something simple like give them a thumbs up. That said what is there has switched me to pretty much keeping it up and running at all times, and has greatly increased my willingness to venture off of Steam and purchase games from another platform.

This all works because they did something somewhat brilliant. Instead of negotiating deals with all of these publishers, they went down the road of allowing for community supported Python integrations to be snapped into the client. Many of these integrations are currently being maintained by GoG, but are being treated as open source projects allowing anyone to look at what the code is doing and figure out how to adapt this to other platforms. As it stands right now these are the following integrations I have found, and you can get to them by typing in the GitHub Search Box in the settings>integrations interface.

  • Battle.net
  • Bethesda.net
  • Epic Games Store
  • GOG.com
  • Guild Wars 2
  • Humble Bundle
  • Minecraft
  • Origin
  • Paradox Plaza
  • Path of Exile
  • PlayStation Network
  • Rockstar
  • Steam
  • Uplay
  • Wargaming.net
  • Xbox Live

As you will notice there are still several that are missing, and the integrations all support different functionalities. The biggest thing that I see missing from various store fronts is the ability to synchronize the friend list. The killer feature for me is being able to integrate and list out everything that I happen to have available through Humble Bundle, since more than once I have re-bought a game that I already had access to through another platform. Humble Bundle is also artificially inflating the numbers since a lot of those games I have already redeemed to Steam and are still showing up in their “non-drm” version available as a zip file download.

I realize that Scopique was joking, but I occasionally do feel like I need to throw this out there. My blog is not sponsored by anyone. Every so often I will latch onto a product like GoG Galaxy 2.0 Client like I am talking about today or my many posts about Parsec streaming client and evangelize about them. This is not because I am getting some kickback from the company, but instead because they are products that I really do find indispensable and want to share them with my friends. I live in this weird space where I consider my readers and the folks I interact with on social media to be friends, and that we are all in this together as some bizarre collaborative experiment. At this point I have turned down what would probably have been thousands of dollars worth of payola that I get offers of through the email accounts associated with this site and my podcast. My opinion is firmly not for sale, but having said that… seriously check out Galaxy 2.0 because I personally find it super cool.