Showing posts with label Video Game Tracking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Video Game Tracking. Show all posts

Saturday, November 07, 2020

Blog: Games of October 2020


October was pretty busy. Keeping two classes in the air while teaching remotely has been a bit of a struggle. So I've been playing more of the bite sized things. I can jump in to and out of really quickly.


My top five games (by play time) for October were:
  1. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Getting some seasonal, halloween, things to do did perk the game up a bit. I'm still finding it a touch bland.

    Animal crossing villager with purple skin, zombie face paint, devil horns and a monocle, scowls at the camera.
    I'm mad they won't let me pick my own costume...

  2. Ogre Battle 64 - Did it snow? Yup. I described Ogre Battle to my partner the other day as "my favourite spreadsheet".


  3. Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - Again and again this remains a classic and my favourite game to just relax and play.

    Hestu the forest nympyh dances in front of Link in a forest.
    He must dance.

  4. Mario 35 - This has been a ton of fun. I've always been a little embarrassed at how I never learned the first Super Mario Bros. This has been great motivation to actually get good (even if it isn't quite the same game from 1989). It's also bite sized

    World 3-2 in Mario 35 with a number of red koops and goombas on the screen.
    I seem to have died. Again.

  5. XCOM: Chimera Squad - I tailed off playing Chimera Squad a little just because sessions can be a little long and I've had a ton of stuff I need to keep working on. There's also the drawback of going back to the desk you've sat at all day to play more games is sometimes a bit hard.

    Godmother and Torque fight a berserker in a shabby bedroom.
    Sometimes the fighting goes bedroom to bedroom.

Here's my total play time chart for October:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Monday, October 05, 2020

Blog: Games of September 2020

September was fairly unremarkable. I've focused on a few games as I've been busy teaching and working on some of the other projects I want to get done.

 My top five games (by play time) for September were:

  1. XCOM: Chimera Squad - I've really been enjoying Chimera Squad. It's got a lot of replayability, with enough differences between the characters to make every mission interesting. Honestly I'd love to see a few more investigations to take on, since this has been a ton of fun to play.


  2. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Didn't play quite as much as I have been. Between being busy with work and trying to get more other things done I've been spending less time on my island. I've also been increasingly disappointed with how little there is to do. 


  3. Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - This game is so, so good. I started playing again because my partner bought a copy for the switch (inspired a bit by all the time we've now spent yelling at Stephen & Mal). She's been playing and enjoying it and I wanted in on the fun. I'm over 300 hours in at this point and I'm still finding new things. The switch version feels a little better than the Wii U, but generally this is such a well put together game.


  4. Cities: Skylines - Not a game I played a ton of, but being back to work my numbers are a little more focused then they are during the summer. Still I've been watching All the Stations, and I got excited to make myself a city with a really good rail network.


  5. Golf Story - I think the replayability of this game is really good, I just haven't picked it up that much. It could also use the ability to bring your story mode character into the pick-up and play sessions.


Here's my total play time chart for September:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:



Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Blog: Games of August 2020


Having taken a good chunk of July off to play video games (and like, vacation, sort of), I started back to getting things done. As such I played a little less and tried to focus a bit more on one game at a time.

My top five games (by play time) for August were:
  1. Golf Story - I love Mario Golf, and I'm patiently waiting for a new one on the switch. In the mean time, I watched Proton Jon play Golf Story on his stream back at the end of July and the itch got me. I really enjoyed the golf mechanic, and thought the story was fairly charming. I think I'm going to do a post about it, but its definitely interesting to mix RPG mechanics with non-combat mechanics.

    Victory!

  2. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Still enjoying the daily grind in ACNH. Feeling a bit sad that there's stuff missing from New Leaf. I'm sure COVID sheltering has affected Nintendo's plans for the game, but the game is wearing just a touch thin finally.

    Fireworks!


  3. Paper Mario: The Origami King - I really enjoyed The Origami King. Conversely to Golf Story I think RPG mechanics without experience griding actually works very well. The Paper Mario games are also extremely well written and this one was no exception.

    Paper!


  4. XCOM: Chimera Squad - I think taking modern XCOM and breaking it down into bite sized chunks works really well. I've been enjoying Chimera Squad more than I remember enjoying XCOM 2. It's not always the tactical game I want, but overall I think it's great.

    Clear!


  5. Octopath Traveller - I *want* to like Octopath, but compared to Golf Story and The Origami King, this is really hard to pick up. That's a bit on the mechanics, it's very slow in the UI and requires a lot of menuing. The addition of very, very slow cut scenes is also not helpful. Finally, while I love the game's combat, if you are low leveled some fights can last up to half an hour for no particular pay off. I'm left wishing for them to use the engine to remake Final Fantasy VI.

    Victory!


Here's my total play time chart for August:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Blog: Games of July 2020


I took a "vacation" and played video games in the last half of July. I'm not sure that was the perfect way to spend my time, but it was pretty good. I think I'd have liked something incredibly deep like a Final Fantasy to sink into, but since I didn't really have that I did the best I could with what I had.

My top five games (by play time) for July 2019 were:
  1. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Always a lovely game. It's not quite everything I could have hoped for in a "next-gen" animal crossing, but it certainly charming and I think compared to New Leaf, it does a good job of hiding the wires that make the world turn.

    Skye singing in the New Horizon town Square
    Skye always brings a touch of joy.

  2. Octopath Traveller - Knowing I'd need to get back to getting stuff done, I really pushed myself to play Octopath as much as I could. I ended up playing a bit more than I really enjoyed, since the game tends to push to long sessions. Overall however I think the game is pretty good. I'm planning a "Thought's on" post for Octopath, but that will be a little bit in coming.

    The heroes fight the huge villainous Left Crow and his minions.
    You know that thing where the ball gets really big when you're playing tennis...

  3. Paper Mario: The Origami King - I liked Paper Mario: Colour Splash, and I think that The Origami King improves on it in every way. I've been enjoying playing through and I really like the pacing and the length. It's been easy to play and I appreciate that I'll be able to finish it in a relatively contained time.

    Mario sits in a coffee shop with a Koopa Barista and a goomba and shy guy at the bar.
    Come for the jumping and hammering, stay for the chill coffee philosophy. 

  4. Wargroove - I was getting my butt kicked by Wargroove (I have a terrible condition of loving tactics games but also being really bad at them). I adjusted the difficulty down a bit and found it really fun and playable. I appreciated being able to play how I wanted to play without having to "be at the game's level". It's possible I may have to go back and play at a harder difficulty later on, but hopefully I'll have learned the systems better by then.

    One undead general pitches a fit about losing to a dog.
    Caeser wins hearts, minds and combat encouters.

  5. Xenonauts - I do really love the original X-COM style of gameplay and Xenonauts definitely does a good job of recreating the organization and careful combat. It does stick very closely to the original format, so I find myself thinking about elements I'd want in a new X-COM style game, especially when it comes to base building and organization.


Here's my total play time chart for July:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Friday, July 03, 2020

Blog: Games of June 2020


June was a bit weird. I spent most of it happily playing Animal Crossing and trying to find cool stuff to fit in my other time. I had some work I needed to get done, so I didn't really sink into any "funemployment".

My top five games (by play time) for June were:
  1. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - Generally the games that get at least a little bit of play time each day end up pretty high on my play time list. AC:NH is a good example of that. It's been really nice to play slow and enjoy the daily play. I think the game could use a few more features, to catch up to New Leaf and also just to give you more things to do each day.

    Screenshot, Villager standing on beach watching shooting stars
    A Beautiful Night on the Island


  2. Europa Universalis IV - I decided to pay for the DLC subscription, so I'm spending my current play time realing from all of the things that don't totally make sense. I'm still not sure how I feel about the newest DLC, but I'm still having fun. Currently France keeps throwing me into wars which eat all my man power as Castile, but I'm learning.

    Screenshot showing Isabella becoming the Queen of Catile
    A New Monarch


  3. Wargroove - I skipped out on Advance Wars despite it being a game I would probably have liked. Wargroove has proved to be a great game to pick up and play even if I'm finding the "normal difficulty" a little punishing. The style is great and it's fun.

    Screenshot of Caesar's Victory (Ranked B)
    A Good Boy's Victory


  4. Secret of Mana (Collection of Mana) - I assume I explain this every year, but Secret of Mana is a game you should play in summer. So I am.

    Screenshot of the Heroes in King Truffle's Palace with Flamie
    A Confident Moment


  5. Xenonauts - I wanted some slow tactical gameplay to enjoy, which Xenonauts does give. I'm finding the whole thing needs a little boost to be interesting but generally it's still fun if you want to very slowly march some soldiers across a bunch of squares. I did spend a bit of time looking at the mods and I'm facinated and frusterated by how many popular mods there are to "remove all women from the game". Definetly feeling like that's not a community I want anything to do with.

    Screenshot of the world map with 2 early bases
    Almost before anything goes wrong.

Here's my total play time chart for MONTH:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Thursday, June 11, 2020

Blog: Games of May 2020


Later stage quarantine, not actually employed, it was an interesting month for games.



My top five games (by play time) for May 2020 were:
  1. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - I don't really know what to say about this one. It's a great refinement of the last main series Animal Crossing and it's very hip. It's easy to pick up, always has something interesting to see and is exactly the right game to have on hand when you have a moment. Definitely a happy place game.

    Animal Crossing villagers celebrating a new bridge.

  2. Europa Universalis 4 - Remember in history class when the House of FitzGerald won the war of the roses? I think that's the part of EU4 I like the best when you're able to play with different events in history and look at interesting `ways things could be'. I played my first ever game to completion and did okay. I manage to sprawl The Ottomans across the middle east but got hung up on late game great powers. I ended up pincered between Russia and Venice and couldn't really overcome them. Still lots of fun and I'm looking forward to the next expansion.

    EU4 Map with Ottomans covering the Middle East and the Arabian Peninsula

  3. XCOM: Chimera Squad - I wasn't particularly sure what to think when they announced this. My memory of XCOM 2 is being perpetually frustrated by turn limits and not quite as drawn into the story (both written and emergent). Chimera Squad seems to fix a lot of that by making the game a series quick and interesting battles. I think the game skews a little bit simple, but I also like that when I do make a mistake it's not a huge reset. I'm having quite a good time with this overall. The game does seem to have some technical problems which they'll hopefully patch up at some point.

    Verge and Cherub looking away from the camera

  4. Super Mario Odyssey - I love how easy it is to pick this game up and jump into something interesting. I'd love more to do and home there's some Super Mario Odyssey 2 floating around in someone's mind somewhere.

    Mario standing in Mario Square in New Donk City

  5. Super Smash Bros. Ultimate - Given that my preference is usually to play games on my own, it's a bit weird to pick this up. But I wanted something a little different than my usual set of RPGs and tactics. I'm enjoying, trying to undo my half-remembered muscle memory from Melee and actually git a little good.

    The hands bosses just being defeated by Ganondorf

Here's my total play time chart for May:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Friday, May 29, 2020

Projects Update: May 2020

What happened to May?

Just at the end of April I finished the coaster project and I was feeling pretty pleased with myself. I didn’t get quite through everything I wanted in April, but I was pretty happy. Then it was halfway through May and I had no idea where I was or what was going on. I will say I’ve been enjoying spring for the most part, although there’s been some quarantine weirdness kicking around my brain as well.

Four large exclamation mark block coasters on a small table with a Jaritos bottle on one.
I'm really happy with the new coasters.



I haven’t made a lot of progress on the game tracker and I’ve found it pretty hard to sit down and write, so I’m behind on both of those for now. I’ve also picked up an academic thing I need to finish fairly quickly, so I’m thinking about that too.

Since I haven’t made much progress I’m just going to slide my goal for the game tracker back to June 30. The goal is to have remote storage of data working by that point (along with having tutorial myself on various build systems and remote storage solutions.

I also want to push forward on my Chrono Trigger sprites so I’d like to get Lucca finished by June 15.

Thursday, May 07, 2020

Blog: Video Games of April 2020


So that was a month, huh. I'm having a hard time believing that April was just one month. At the beginning of the month I was still teaching. I've made it through completing that, all the marking and the clean up and spent a few weeks hanging out in quarantine. I'm actually having a hard time remembering what I played and why, but that's why I track this stuff I suppose.

My top five games (by play time) for April 2020 were:
  1. Dragon Quest XI S - I spent a lot of the month trying to finish up Dragon Quest XI, but got hung up on the secret, prove the the mystical something-or-other that you're the best hero the world has ever seen. It was mostly fun, but that secret boss kinda soured me a bit. On the other hand hitting level 99 was pretty fun and it didn't take me too long in any one session. DQXI really shines in the late game / second game. I kinda wish I'd felt that positive about it the whole way through, but generally it was worth while. I really didn't get into the 2D / historical stuff at all, but honestly I haven't played that much Dragon Quest overall.

    Erik! Erik! He's our lad! If he can't do it we're still bad!


  2. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - It's been nice to have a slow game to play and I've played it very slow. I find myself at odds a bit with Tom Nook who's looking to fill up the island. I signed up for a virtual getaway to a deserted island, what are you doing building permanent home-owner associations... But it's been fun for sure.

    Celebrations!


  3. Europa Universalis 4 - Getting a little better each time I play and honestly having a lot of fun. I've also developed surprising feelings about areas of Europe and the Middle East from 1444 to the 1700s. Also a minor fear of Austria.

    People often forget about that time the Ottomans occupied the whole of Sweden. (Including me I was super baffled when I got this message)


  4. Super Mario World (SNES on Switch) - I think I've mentioned it before, but I'm fairly sure this was the first video game I purchased with my own money, because it came with my Super Nintendo, which I purchased.  I've never actually played it all the way through and so it's been nice when work's done to sit down and play.

    The first time I earned this screen in the 20 some years I've owned this game. (And I still had to weasel a little to get there)


  5. Super Smash Bros. Ultimate - I've been holding off picking up Ultimate because I'm kinda short on local friends who might want to play. But I've been watching Steven and Mal play through classic mode, and it looked fun, so I picked it up . Seems like I still main Marth (sorry) and it's been a ton of fun to have to hand.

    Fancy fighting.

Here's my total play time chart for April:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Friday, April 03, 2020

Blog: Games of March 2020


Well that was a month. I went from a fairly normal semester, if one where I was struggling with workload a bit, to working from home and transitioning all my teaching to online. That caused a pretty radical restructuring of my life. Interestingly it hasn't really changed how much I've played, but it has adjusted how I've played. I'm trying (I guess as always) to be better about playing mindfully, and it is a bit of an effort to not pick up EU4 when it's available on the same desk I'm working on. Also making sure I can play for some escapism is important.

On top of that, the new Animal Crossing: New Horizons came out. That's been an interesting addition to the mix, because, as with all animal crossing games, it flows in real time and so it's worthwhile to play several different times in a day. That's tied in nicely with working from home and I've done a fairly good job of keeping it down to short stop ins on coffee breaks.

My top five games (by play time) for March were:
  1. Europa Universalis 4 - I'm continuing to enjoy the game, now that I actually understand what I'm doing to some extent. I've also started checking in on the Eu4 reddit from time to time and I'm starting to understand the game a little more broadly. It certainly fits the role nicely as some escapist entertainment and it's nice to have when I want to go somewhere else for a bit.

    This was fun while it lasted.


  2. Dragon Quest XI S - I thought I'd try to finish this up before Animal Crossing: New Horizons released. I didn't although I think I'm fairly close to the end now. I did finally reach the point where I was finding some interesting challenge and some interesting opportunities in the combat system to do interesting things. I still find that I don't like this as much as Dragon Quest VIII, but it certainly has a lot of upside.

    Sassy Bunch 


  3. Animal Crossing: New Horizons - I realize that I was a bit dumb trying to finish Dragon Quest. This is an Animal Crossing game, and that means that it really doesn't benefit from going fast. I've been trying to limit the amount I play a little so that there's always something else new to think about and look forward too. It's a nice follow up to New Leaf, which I dropped a few years back, and it has some great game play and quality of life improvements. I'm not sure it's everything I'd hoped for, but it's a wonderful game and exactly the game everyone needs right now.

    Welcome Home


  4. Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival - The standard continues and still feels good in the New Horizon era. I'm actually putting together some thoughts about it, which I hope to post soon.


    Always Together


  5. Cursed Treasure 2 - And to think I thought the end of Adobe Flash was going to be the crisis of 2020 I was going to have to think about. As it happens IriySoft released a remastered version. Although I've discovered I don't like the remaster nearly so much as the original. Still it's nice to see that the game will live on. (And I'm sure I'll get used to it.)


Here's my total play time chart for March 2020:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Thursday, March 12, 2020

Blog: Games of February 2020


February was another quiet month. I'm trying to get through Dragon Quest XI before ... things ... happen in March, and I've been feeling in that winter strategy mode which has left me playing quite a bit of EU4.


My top five games (by play time) for February were:
  1. Europa Universalis 4 - Several hundred hours in, I think I'm starting to get a feel for this game. One what is about by 11th attempt at an Ottomans game, I've figured out how to manage money and growth appropriately and I'm starting to get a feel for which wars I should fight when (and how many levels of tech I should have). I'm extremely proud of taking on a giant Austria (they ate Venice and Hungary) and forcing them to give up a lot of territory and money.

    This is fine.


  2. Dragon Quest XI S - I think the post-game is where this game actually shines. I'm having more fun now than I was for big parts of the main game. Having the correct difficulty is really important. I am a little disappointed that some of the personal growth the team goes through in the main game is undone in the post-game,

    This never happened.


  3. Cursed Treasure 2 - This continues to be my procrastination game, or hopefully the game I play for short bursts between getting work to be done. I ended up downloading Kongregate's Kartridge program so that I could keep playing it after Chrome stops allowing Flash to play. Not sure what I'm going to do about some of the other important flash games out there.


  4. Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival - That rainbow colour, it's Festival!

    This quiet moment.


  5. Super Mario Odyssey - Super Mario Odyssey continues to be a real delight to pick up and play.

    This is fun.


Here's my total play time chart for February:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Saturday, February 08, 2020

Blog: Games of January 2020


January was a little bit about catching up from last year. I finished the Chrono Trigger play through I started and finally finished up Dragon Quest. Both have a new game plus to tackle, so I'm not really done, but it's good to get some games finished.
My top five games (by play time) for January were:
  1. Dragon Quest XI S - I'm finding this one a little hard to keep going with. The story hasn't really grabbed me, but the grinding is fun and the game has just enough of that RPG build that I've had fun.

    The Darkness Before the Light.


  2. Chrono Trigger - Still one of the best games of all time. I'm feeling a bit rusty with this play through, but I'm also trying to spice things up a bit and play with someone other than the Crono, Marle, Lucca power house.

    The Light After the Darkness.


  3. Europa Universalis 4 - Well, I've now experimented with running up as much debt as possible (well kinda), now I'm trying to see if I can go the other way.

    The Austrians are Coming to Eat Me.


  4. Super Mario Maker 2 - I haven't spent too much time making levels. I'm finding the switch interface a little harder to love. I think I've played enough that the weird artificial feeling I had earlier on has faded, but it does feel like it lacks a little bit of charm over all.

    The Team in the Dungeon.


  5. Animal Crossing: Amiibo Fest - Keep on keeping on.

    The Ambition of Alpacas.


Here's my total play time chart for January:



And here's a chart of how much I've played over the month:




Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Blog: 2019 in Games

This is my third annual yearly games wrap up and I'm taking a little bit to look at what I played in 2019, what I enjoyed playing in 2019 and how 2019 was in games over all.

The Hooflepuffs, true heroes.


Top Games by Time Played


In total I’ve played 60 different games in 2019 and played for a total of 730 hours. The games I played the least were Starfox, StuntFX and Puyo Puyo, all from the SNES Classics on Switch. Mario Golf: World Tour was in the middle of my pack at just above 2 hours and by a pretty incredible margin I played Fire Emblem: Three Houses for almost 180 hours, more than 120 hours more than the next game.

By play time, my top 10 games of 2019 were:

  1. Fire Emblem: Three Houses - 179
  2. Super Mario Odyssey - 58
  3. Animal Crossing: Amiibo Festival - 57
  4. Dragon Quest XI S - 48
  5. Breath of Fire II - 42
  6. Pokémon Go - 38
  7. Xenonauts - 29
  8. Europa Universalis 4 - 27
  9. Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - 25
  10. Fire Emblem: Awakening - 20

Last year I was concerned about how much I played games unintentionally. This year, I think I did a good job actually choosing what to play and enjoying the things I picked.

Fire Emblem: Three Houses is a very, very good game. It’s also a game with a very large amount of content. It has 4 endings and each of those has enough difference that as you play through the game there are enough things to keep it interesting. I played the first play though on easy and the second on hard which was about the right amount of difficulty. I played the third on easy because I was hoping to see more of the game, but honestly found that it dragged out a lot.

I might not have played quite so much more but I managed to get very sick with a nasty flue for most of late August (which screwed up my teaching schedule something fierce). The switch in general and FE:3H in particular are a really nice addition to being so tired that standing and walking to the bathroom is about your daily allotment of energy.

Super Mario Odyssey was also a ton of fun and so easy to pick up and enjoy at any point. I found it didn’t play as nicely on mobile as it does on the TV, but other than that it was always a joy to play.

Mario is never bothered.

Top Games by My Rating


This year my favourite games were (in alphabetical order) :


  • Cadence of Hyrule
  • Chrono Trigger
  • Fire Emblem: Three Houses
  • Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
  • Ogre Battle 64
  • Opus Magnum
  • Super Mario Odyssey
  • Tetris / Tetris 99

I don’t look back at my scores/ratings from previous years, so this is a subjective view from late 2019. Nintendo certainly gets the bulk of my happy time this year. Cadence of Hyrule is a real delight on top of Fire Emblem, Breath of the Wild and Super Mario Odyssey. I’m usually a little more conservative about Ogre Battle 64, but honestly I do love that mess of a game. Tetris continues along, even if I did land on 99 rather than effect 9or any of the others). And of course Chrono Trigger is still one of the very best games of all time.

Puns and boss fights. Although you might want to check it out for the music.


Thoughts


I played a lot of great games in 2019 and I’m generally pleased with what I chose to play and how I chose to play it. 2019 had a lot of really good games in it and having missed out on the switch for a number of years I was able to play the best it had to offer.

I’m looking forward to playing more in 2020. I’m especially excited about Animal Crossing: New Horizons, but I’m sure there are going to be lots of interesting things to play. I’m also putting a lot of effort into organizing my work / play time so that I’ll have the time to regularly sit down and enjoy things without feeling like I ought to be doing something else.

I feel like we’re at a point of excellence in games and hopefully we’ll see more creative and enjoyable games come out this year. I also want to make sure I take the time to enjoy the games which are interesting and the games which stand as a more complete art.

The home we come back to.

Project 24: Blog HTML Generator - Introduction

 I’ve been having a lot of fun with my new book tracking infographic. Doing things like making a word cloud of authors and a grid of titles...