We Finally Know How To Buy The New Hitman Game!

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When they announced Hitman, they were talking about an ‘all digital’ release with continuing content, but then you could buy it all at the end.  Which sounded a lot like episodic distribution, but they were hesitant to confirm that was the case.  Well now we know it is indeed being released in episodes.  For $15 your get the Prolog and Paris, and then for the next five months you can buy each new location for $10.  Bringing the grand total to $65, or you can spend $60 up front and get the whole thing as it comes out.  What they are not telling you, is that I am sure at the end of it all it will come out on a disk for $60 as well.

This model should work well for Hitman.  The story doesn’t matter much in these games, so just getting new locations added on is perfect.  What I am hoping is that this game will be successful enough to continue releasing episodes/locations after the first five are completed.  A season two if you will.  It would be great to have a game that just kept releasing good content for a couple of years!

Shmee’s 5 Most Anticipated Games For 2016!

It stands to reason that if I gave you the movies I am looking forward to this year yesterday, that I would give you the games I am looking forward to this year today!  Doesn’t it?  I think it does.  There are a lot of good games coming out this year, but here are my top five!

5: Crackdown 3

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What do you get with Crackdown 3?  How about a city that you can totally destroy with all your friends!  Crackdown has always been about multiplayer chaos, and I hope that and it delivers that and more this spring!

4: Quantum Break

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Quantum Break is the only original IP on this list, which is kind of sad, but it also shows how much faith I have in Remedy (the creators of Max Payne) to make a fun and exciting third person shooter.

3: Deus Ex: Mankind Divided

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When Eidos Montreal took over the Deus Ex franchise with Human Revolution I was surprised with how great it was, so I am very excited for their follow-up Mankind Divided.  I was bummed to find out this game had been pushed back to August from February, but luckily I have a ton of games to play still from last year!

2: Mass Effect: Andromeda

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After Mass Effect 3’s great but not Mass Effect amazing outing, I am trying not to get too excited for this game, but come on!  It is a new Mass Effect game!  One of the greatest RPG franchises of all time is coming back!  Only my irrational love of Hitman keeps this game from being number one on my list.

1: Hitman

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IO Interactive as all but apologized for Hitman: Absolution, so they are trying to make things right by having an online, customizable, and always growing game for you to take out targets from the shadows!  This sound like the Hitman game I have always wanted, so it has to be my number one game!

That is my list!  What games are you looking forward to this year?  Or have they all been postponed to 2017 already (Scalebound anyone)?

Shmee’s Top 5 Video Games Of 2015!

2015 was the year that the current console generation finally came in to its own.  There were a ton of games to play this year so narrowing the list to five was difficult, but I think I came up with a pretty good group.  Here they are in reverses order!

5: Rise of the Tomb Raider

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There were a lot of games bucking for this spot, and it almost went to any number of titles, but after the enthusiastic words of BlackRaven and playing ‘Rise of the Tomb Raider’ a bit for myself after getting it for Christmas, I can say it comfortably finds itself at number 5.  This outing is one of Lara Croft’s best outings!

4: Batman: Arkham Knight

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Almost everything about Batman: Arkham Knight was perfect (if you played it on a console).  Almost, and that is way it sits and number four.  It was few less boring Batmobile fights away from being a number one contender.  Still, it was an amazing game and a great way for Rocksteady Studios leave the Batman franchise.  I can’t wait to play what they come up with next.

3: Halo 5

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343 Industries needed a hit after some fans were disappointed with Halo 4, and they delivered with Halo 5.  It was a great effort!  While some of the single player levels were a little dicey (mostly due to a dumb reoccurring boss), Halo 5 might be the best pure multiplayer shooter in a long time.  I think it will be played on the pro circuit for years to come.

2: Fallout 4

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Once Fallout 4 was announced, I thought for sure that it would be my number one game, but it came up just short because of a simplified dialog system.  The new dialog tree removed some of the role playing that the series was known for.  However, Fallout 4 is still an amazing game filled with a ton of content and it should be played by just about everyone.

1: The Witcher 3: The Wild Hunt

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It turns out that with The Witcher and The Witcher 2 that CD Projekt RED was just toying with us.  I was looking forward to The Witcher 3 going in to 2015, but I had no idea just how good it was going to be.  The Witcher 3 gave us a gripping and emotional story that truly felt like the player had a hand in crafting.  The Wild Hunt may not just be my favorite game of 2015, but it is one of the best games of all time.

Like I said there were a ton of great game this year, so I bet my list is different from just about everyone else’s just due to the sample size alone!  I would love to hear what games you thought rose to the top in 2015!

Shmee Wanders Fallout 4’s Wasteland!

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Fallout 4 is a massive game, and as such I don’t think I will be finishing it any time soon, but I am going to let you know what I think so far.  If you liked the previous Fallout games, you will like Fallout 4.  If freeform wandering and questing isn’t your thing, I don’t think Fallout 4 will get you to change your mind.  As for me?  I love it.  Climbing up a mountain or exploring a cave just to see what I will find keeps me entertained for hours.  Bethesda continues to make my favorite RPG experiences.

This time around the game starts before the bombs drop, and we get to see a glimpse of the what the alternate future looked like.  I would have like to explore that time some more, but soon Fallout 4 rushes us off to Vault 111 where our character is cryogenically frozen.  Then upon waking, we witness our baby boy being kidnapped and husband shot (I am playing as a woman, if you play as a man your wife gets it).  We are then frozen again for an unknown amount of time until we get to wake up for good and strike out to find our son, avenge our loved one’s death, and explore the post-apocalypse.

The story has been much better this time around.  Just the fact they make your character as out of time and place as much as the player is, is a smart move.  You and your character get to explore this new world together, and what is going on is just as new to your onscreen persona as it is to you.  Plus as a father myself, a story about a kidnapped child hits much harder.

I will get the graphics portion of this review out of the way first since that is what the internet is raging about.  Fallout 4 is not a groundbreaking graphical achievement.  It is a step up from Skyrim, but not a huge leap.  It looks much nicer than Fallout 3 and New Vegas, but mostly because they expanded their color pallet.  While gray, brown, and tan still dominate, the other colors get to come out and play.  It would have been nice to see Bethesda amp up the graphics like we have seen with Batman Arkham Knight or The Witcher 3, but it still looks good enough, and neither of those games feature the amount of interactivity that Fallout 4 does.

Speaking of interactivity, crafting got a major overhaul.  Not only can you cook food and modify armor and weapons, you can build whole villages or settlements.  This seems to be completely optional, and it does not affect the story in any way, but it is a lot of fun.  It is a nice way to be able to put your stamp on the wasteland.  Once you have a few villages setup you can even create trade routes.  The problem with this mode is that it gives you little to no training on how to use it, and it is lacking some options.  Like walls with windows.  Complicated things like using electricity can have you pulling your hair out until you find right sequence of stuff to build.

The other new big feature to Fallout 4 is the fully voiced dialog.  This makes the game much better overall, but sometimes you do get the unfortunate ‘Bioware Effect’.  What happens is you think you are going to say one thing, but your character seems to say the exact opposite.  It can be frustrating when a long conversation goes south on you.  Especially when you are playing a charisma heavy character like I am.

Speaking of charisma.  The Fallout SPECIAL skills and perks tree got a total revamp, and it is much easier to follow this time around.  Getting the right skill doesn’t seem like such a crapshoot anymore.  Also revamped is the loot system.  You have way more armor slots for your character, and for a person like me that loves loot, this is a big bonus.

Like I said in the intro, Fallout 4 is more of the same, but tweaked, and in my opinion made better.  Not better enough that it will change the minds of people that do not enjoy this type of game in the first place, but good enough for me to recommend this game to open world RPG fans.  Bethesda has had me hooked on their games since Morrowind, and so far Fallout 4 has that hook in real deep.

BlackRaven Raids some tombs in Rise of the Tomb Raider

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Hello, everybody! I’m BlackRaven, also known as Shmee’s younger brother, and I’ll be giving some of my impressions on Crystal Dynamics’ latest entry in the Tomb Raider franchise. If you are into video games, and haven’t been living under a rock for a while then you probably know that last Tuesday a couple of games released. One of them being a little thing called Fallout 4, I’m not sure if you’ve heard of it, and the other being Rise of the Tomb Raider. Since Shmee decided to go the Fallout 4 route, I thought it would be good if I gave my current impressions of latest Tomb Raider game. Currently I am about half way through it.

Back in 2013, Crystal Dynamics (the current developers of the Tomb Raider franchise), decided to reboot the aging franchise and update it with some modern sensibilities and gameplay. Despite being reviewed well critically and selling reasonably well, it didn’t quite meet the game publisher’s, Square Enix, incredibly high sales expectations. The future of a direct sequel was a little shaky, but, luckily with the help of some Microsoft dollars, it has come to fruition. This personally made me pretty happy, because if you ask anyone who knows me well they’ll tell you I can’t shut up about the last Tomb Raider game. Even though I think some of them wished I would.

If you have played the 2013 Tomb Raider then you will pretty much know what to expect going into this game. Rise of the Tomb Raider is very much like the previous game, but better. The biggest changes between this game and the last one are the environments.  The entirety of the last game took place on a dreary wind swept island in the pacific full of brown landscapes and ramshackle huts, and while that game had some eye pleasing vistas and “whoa” moments the environments started to feel a little drab as the game progressed. This game certainly addresses a lot of those complaints because the locales are much more varied in design and feel this time around, and they look gorgeous. At almost every new area I came to, I couldn’t help myself but just stop and take in the scenery. Gameplay also runs at a nice crisp native 1080p, which goes a long way to helping the game look as good as it does. I think it might actually be the best looking game currently out on Xbox One right now. Unlike the last game, there are also actual tombs to explore. Sure, the previous game had challenge tombs, optional one off areas to explore with an interesting physics puzzle, they generally were just caves filled with some ramshackle contraptions the island natives had put together. Challenge tombs are back this time, but so far they’ve each been actual tombs to raid. Not just relegated to optional tombs though, the main story line will often throw you into gorgeous ancient ruins from civilizations long past that are particularly fun to platform your way through..

As you traverse your way through Siberia, where most of the game takes place, you’ll come across large hub worlds. Game spaces full of animals to hunt, ruins and caves to explore, and loot to grab. They do a good job of making these new areas fun to run, jump, and platform your way around. More often or not, they’ll tease you by showing you something up on a ledge or platform that you just can’t quite reach which forces you to explore the environment to try and figure out the puzzle of how to get up there. Sometimes you’ll be rewarded with a cool collectable relic, or, if you’re lucky, the entrance to a new challenge tomb or treasure filled crypt. You’ll even find certain pathways or doors you can’t even access the first time you pass by. This game and the 2013 reboot both fall in the  metriodvania style of game design. Like Metroid or Castlevania, as you progress you will unlock new gear and gadgets that let you go back to previously explored areas and open up new sections of the world that you could not previously access. They really nailed the feeling of exploration in this game without ever making it feel tedious. The hub worlds are dense but never too large, and it also helps that you can fast travel to any of the previous hub locations at any time. However, if exploring old areas and finding secrets isn’t your thing, the main storyline never strictly forces you to go back to a previous hub, at least, so far in my play through.

In a new addition to the series these new spaces also have quest givers that task you with finding or killing something and reward you with cool new outfits that provide unique bonuses. Occasionally, you’ll also sometimes run across a merchant that will let you trade gold collectable coins for special weapons or gadgets. Unfortunately, the quests are not particularly exciting, and the dialogue is never much more than, “Hey, could you go do this thing for me?” The outfits are cool looking however, so more often than not you’ll still find me doing them anyway. Luckily they have been pretty easy and quick to accomplish, so I haven’t minded much, but I wish there was a little more to them to make them more interesting.

Another complaint the 2013 reboot had was that the story was a little weak. Lara’s transformation as a character was interesting, but all the other characters involved were pretty flat. This go around, the story is much more engaging. It’s still your standard Indiana Jones type fare, involving an evil ancient organization, called Trinity, that is chasing a mystical artifact of untold power, but it is presented pretty well at least and the main villains actually have quite a bit of depth. I’m usually not one for collecting and listening to audio logs and journals, but I often found myself stopping to listen to a lot of the ones I have come across because I found them genuinely interesting, especially the journals of key figures from Trinity’s past. Camilla Luddington also does a great job of portraying Lara Croft. Her voice acting really fits the role well, and I like what Crystal Dynamics is doing with Lara’s character. I appreciate that she’s no longer just a sassy large chested action hero who just spews one liners. She’s much more relatable and real now, and I am looking forward to see where they will take her arc throughout the rest of this game and in future games.

All in all, I’ve really been enjoying my time with the latest Tomb Raider game and I’m excited to keep playing and finish it up before I start the beast that is Fallout 4. So far I highly recommend it. I suppose that could change as I have yet to complete the game, but it has been so excellent so far that I doubt that will change. Rise of the Tomb Raider maintains a lot of the things that made the 2013 Tomb Raider game so fun, but also expands on and tightens up a lot of things that the last game didn’t quite do so well. Particularly in the world environment and storytelling departments. I know that many of you will probably have some tight budgets this holiday season, and other games such as Halo 5, Star Wars Battlefront, and Fallout 4 will probably take priority in your gaming budget. However, you should keep this game in mind the next time you are looking for a new game to play because it is excellent, and I hope they make more of them.