Archive for November, 2008

The Peasants Rejoice; or, “Thank You, Mr. Howard”

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Lifted from the Fallout 3 Official Site:

November 25, 2008 (Rockville, MD) – Bethesda Softworks…today announced plans to make both its editor and downloadable content available for its award-winning game Fallout 3 in the coming weeks. The official editor for Fallout 3, called the G.E.C.K. (Garden of Eden Creation Kit), will be available for free download in December and will allow Games for Windows users to create and add their own content to the game. In addition, the first official downloadable content, Operation: Anchorage, will be available exclusively for the Xbox 360 video game and entertainment system from Microsoft and Games for Windows in January, and more downloadable content coming in February and March.

“We’ve always seen the original world of Fallout 3 as a foundation for even more content. Some created by us, and a lot more created by users,” said Todd Howard, game director for Fallout 3. “It’s fun to create your own character, but it can be equally fun to create your own adventures. We can’t wait to see what the community does with the G.E.C.K.”

The release of the G.E.C.K. provides the community with tools that will allow players to expand the game any way they wish. Users can create, modify, and edit any data for use with Fallout 3, from building landscapes, towns, and locations to writing dialogue, creating characters, weapons, creatures, and more.

This sort of illustrates my enthusiasm at the announcement:

Pastels!

Post-Apocalyptic Washington, D.C. Has Never Looked So Good

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

I owe a friend my review of my latest computer gaming obsession, Bethesda Softworks’ Fallout 3, so today you get a Computer Game post.

My computer game genre is fantasy/adventure role-playing.  I know; that sounds kinky.  What I mean by that is that I prefer single player and online multi-player games that incorporate the stereotypical “fantasy” universe.  Elves, magic users, dwarves, swords and other melee weapons (as opposed to guns and grenades).  That sort of thing.  Think Dungeons and Dragons or The Lord of the Rings.  My favorite computer game of all time is Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind, put out by Bethesda Softworks in 2002.  It still has a large, vibrant player community, even though a six-year-old computer game is considered to be Ancient History.

I was a little bit disappointed with Elderscrolls IV: Oblivion, but I nonetheless enjoyed the three to four months I spent with it.  Compared to Morrowind, the world was limited and homogeneous.  I didn’t feel it was a sequel to Morrowind — more of an underdeveloped subplot in the ongoing story of Tamriel.   But, like I said, I still enjoyed it — just in a different way.  It wasn’t enough to sour me on Bethesda games.

When I heard that Bethesda was doing Fallout 3, I knew I had to play it.  It was Bethesda, and I had no experience with the prior games in the Fallout series.  The basic premise intrigued me:

Imagine if, after World War II, the timeline had split.  Our world forked into one branch, the Fallout universe into the other.  In that other branch, technology progressed at a much more impressive rate, while American society remained locked in the cultural norms of the 1950′s.  It was an idyllic “world of tomorrow,” filled with servant robots, beehive hairdos, and fusion powered cars.  And then in the year 2077, at the climax of a long-running war with China, it all went to hell in a globe-shattering nuclear war.

200 years later you, the Player, are thrust outside into the the Capital Wasteland after spending the first 19 years of your life safe underground in a city/fallout shelter known as Vault 101.

The Capital Wasteland

Fallout 3 Concept Art

Brotherhood of Steel

High-resolution versions of these screenshots and the concept art can be found here and here.

I’m not going to offer any spoilers here, nor can I claim to be a computer game reviewer of any merit.  I just know what I like (and what I don’t like).  This is more of a list of reactions and impressions than a game review.

First, the negatives:

• It definitely deserves the Mature 17+ rating from the ESRB.  I haven’t seen any nudity, but there is plenty of other stuff.  Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Sexual Themes, Strong Language, and Use of Drugs is the official description.  None of the nasty stuff is gratuitous, in my opinion.  It’s appropriate to the violent dog-eat-dog world of the game.  Just be forewarned — this game isn’t for your 13-year-old brother/son/nephew or sister/daughter/niece.  Really.  It took me a while to get used to shooting peoples’ heads off.  There’s a high “splat factor” here.  And a high “How Many Time Can One NPC use the F-word” factor, too.

• Bethesda didn’t bundle the game with a Construction Set.  One of the high points to Morrowind and Oblivion is that the player could create or modify in-game elements with the software that came with the game.  Want fancier armor or a kick-butt sword?  Your own house in the city?  Less encumbrance?  More speed?  A whole new quest?  Make it (or Modify it) yourself with the Construction Set.    No construction set here, cats and kittens.  That’s a big “thumbs down” from me, Bethesda.

• In Morrowind and Oblivion, your increases in level came with the development of your skills.  You gained experience in a skill when you used it in the game.  You got better at casting Illusion spells the more times you cast Illusion spells.  Same for Lockpicking or Alchemy or Athletics or whatever.  Every time you picked a lock, you get a little bit better at picking locks in general.  After you had increased your major and minor skills 10 times, you gained a level.  Not so for Fallout 3.  Your earn generic experience points for killing a monster, or picking a lock, or solving a quest.  When you gain enough points, you go up a level and can allocate so many points to your skills.  From a role-player’s perspective, this makes no sense.  How can I go out in the Wasteland and kill a bunch of radioactive giant scorpions with my 10mm handgun and get better at wielding missile launchers?  How can picking a bunch of locks successfully increase my skill in offering medical treatment to wounded Non-Player Characters?  The way the game mechanics exist in Fallout 3, I could keep allocating points to Big Guns (e.g. Missile Launchers) every time I level.  Eventually, I could have a Master rating in Big Guns without ever having touched one in the game.  Um….yeah.  That’s another big “thumbs down” from this Role Player Grrrl.

Now for the positives:

•  V.A.T.S. or Vault-Tec Assisted Targeting System.  Basically, you can spend something called Action Points and make called shots on the mobs.  I will say that called head-shots from stealth are very cool, if not a little bloody.  Bloody as in “exploding heads are bloody.”  Cringe-worthy but kewl.  The first time I saw this, part of me said, Eeeeewwwww and the rest of me said, This rocks. Srsly.

•  The graphics on a high-end gaming machine are very sweet.  I’m not a techie, but I do know that Some People are jealous of Squeaker (my home computer).  I’m running Ultra-High graphics with no visible lag.

Laiane

•  You get a lot of character customization through the use of Perks (character traits or skills you can choose for yourself at various levels).  Certain Perks can alter game play significantly.  For example, I chose the Perk “Black Widow” at Level 2.  This not only grants me 10% more damage against male opponents, I also get unique dialog options in some situations.  For example, Mr. Burke, a rather shady character you meet at the beginning of the game, is now sending me impassioned love letters.  Once he discovered I had no interest in blowing up the starting city of Megaton and was rather offended by his suggestion, as he was insinuating I do for him and his “friends,” he apparently fell for me.  I guess he liked strong, opinionated women.  Or he’s setting me up.  We will see how this develops.

Laiane in Megaton

•  For lack of a better word, I like the atmosphere of the game.  Gritty, gray, dirty and dingy.  It has a consistent feel to it.   I also like seeing parts of D.C. that I encountered when I lived there.  The Metro tunnels.  The monuments.  The museums.  It’s not entirely accurate, though.  The Washington Monument does not have a  metal substructure — it’s solid stone in Real Life.

•  Your actions have long-reaching consequences.  You gain (or lose) Karma Points with certain actions, and your total “Karma” affects how NPC’s interact with you.  There’s a continuum of Good – Neutral – Evil for the Player.  Yes, you can “buy” good karma with donations to the church or giving beggars purified water, so it is similar in some respect to paying off your bounty for crimes you committed in Morrowind or Oblivion.  I haven’t quite put my finger on this element of game play, but Karma in Fallout 3 is not necessarily the same as Reputation in Morrowind or Oblivion.  You can be good without necessarily being famous.

So, this version of Laiane Wolfsong has about 40 hours of gameplay under her belt at Level 7.  There’s a lot more of this game to explore (and re-explore with a different type of character), but my first impressions are more positive than negative.

Game on, cats and kittens.

Laiane and Nova at Moriarty's Saloon

Knitters for Obama – The Quilt

Saturday, November 8th, 2008

The Knitters for Obama group on Ravelry was a bright spot in all the pre-election craziness of 2008.  I found the group in March, long before the Democratic Party’s nomination of Obama, and I spent hours there hoping, commiserating, dreaming, bitching, watching the debates, planning, and, from time to time, actually knitting.

The official scoreboard for the KFO fundraiser came in at $32,717 with contributions coming in from over 600 donors.  Not bad for a bunch of little old ladies with pointy sticks, eh?

I did win a prize in the last and biggest raffle – the Knitters for Obama lap quilt.  MaryAlice, a KFO member in Birmingham, Alabama, made the prize I won in the second raffle — the Obama knitting bag.  I was so impressed by her handiwork that I put the lion’s share of my virtual raffle tickets on the quilt.

In any event, here are pictures of the quilt.  I have a set of them over on my Flickr photostream if you want a closer look.

KFO quilt

*****

Obama Quilt Quote

*****

KFO quilt

*****

Kissy and Quilt

*****

KFO quilt

*****

KFO quilt

The quilt will be an heirloom of my house.  I intend to pass it on to my niece, Frances, when I’m older (i.e., older in this instance meaning dead).

Mary Alice shared the following with me:

The airport post office is no longer open on Sundays so I sent the quilt today, via Express Mail.  The clerk assured me it would be at your office by noon tomorrow.  She had to take a peek and then had to take it to the back to show her friends.

She always takes my packages when I send something to the grandbabies.  She and I are about the same age and were both around during the Civil Rights movement here in Birmingham 45 or so years ago.  She’s black and I’m white. We were both in tears today when we finished the transaction, just thinking and talking about how excited we both are to be voting for Barack tomorrow.

I’m honored that you’ll pass the quilt on to your niece. Please make a note to tell her how much making the quilt meant to me as a white Southerner who has lived thru this momentous change. I’ve always been a Democrat and I’m especially proud to be one now.

I’m especially proud to be a Democrat right now, too,

It’s a Beautiful Day

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

One of the gals over on the Knitters for Obama forum on Ravelry put this video together.  I love the photos from overseas she’s incorporated.


Today

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Ballot

I will admit that this is not my ballot.  It’s either my brother’s or sister-in-law’s, more than likely my sister-in-law’s.  I was far too tired this morning to think about sneaking my camera into a voting booth.

One Day

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Three Days

Saturday, November 1st, 2008

Yeah, I’m slacking on the blog writing and posting a meme instead. This election is giving me anxiety fits, and I’m using that as as excuse.


You Are 88% Democrat


You are a card carrying Democrat, and a pretty far left one at that!
There’s no chance anyone would ever mistake you for a Republican.
How Democrat Are You?