Edit: Update for EBA progress. Cleared the game on normal and I've done a couple stages on hard. My current score-rank is 3 Star Commander.
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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I found the third dungeon in Neutopia, but it turns out that some of the rooms are dark and you need some glowing moss or something to proceed. So I
backtracked and explored this section of the overworld a little. It's a little less overwhelming when the overworld is broken up like this. I found someone
who increased my bomb capacity to 12 and a few people offering hints. I eventually found the dude with the moss and I'm ready to make a serious attempt at
the dungeon now.
Edit: Update for EBA progress. Cleared the game on normal and I've done a couple stages on hard. My current score-rank is 3 Star Commander.
Last Edited By: CLOUDBOND007
05/19/08 12:44 AM.
Edited 1 times.
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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Every other screen in Neutopia has a person you can talk to by pushing a block or burning something to reveal an entrance. I think it's because they
didn't want to bother designing actual towns. There was one that had me laughing.
You walk in like every other hidden area to talk to another useless NPC and the guy inside says something like "Ha ha ha, fool! I am the Emperor of Darkness! Just kidding, you have to have a sense of humor in these times." I finished the third dungeon. The boss was two creatures that fly around randomly and shoot what seems to be knives in eight directions. I got a new shield in that dungeon that made blocking them pretty easy, but it was also easy enough just to dodge. I used my fire rod mostly because of it's range. I pretty much use it to kill everything in this game. I found out that when I'm at full health, the fire attack is different. Slower and actually much less useful. I guess they ripped off every aspect of Zelda and still needed more because it seems I'm going to need a rainbow drop to create a bridge. I got elaborate directions for how to find the guy with the rainbow drop and when I got there he tells me someone stole it. Nice job guarding that thing. |
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TaroSH |
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Well, the Rainbow Drop works like the Stepladder. It doesn't just create one on your way to Dirth's lair or something.
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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I had a hunch about where the rainbow drop was going to be. I had visited the place before but I either didn't find the stairs or the trigger to allow them
to appear wasn't active yet. I cleared the fourth dungeon. The rainbow bridge serves the same function as the ladder in Zelda 1, again to the point of
being comical.
I'm conflicted here because the game obviously doesn't aspire to be anything better than a clone, and because it's been getting easier. But it's also highly interesting to play a game of this type again. None of the future Zelda games, even LttP, which was most similar, really captured the feel of the original. So yeah, the music isn't as good as Zelda by a long shot, the graphics are a bit generic, and the atmosphere is lacking. But the gameplay itself is pretty solid if you don't mind it being a lot easier. What makes it easier... wow, before I started making this post, I hadn't given the issue much thought, but there's so many things. There are many more hints than Zelda and they're translated well enough to be comprehensible. You've also got a compass pointing you in the direction of the dungeon (even if you might not have all the items you need to get there or survive in the dungeon yet). It's a lot fairer in terms of the hidden overworld secrets, too. There's something hidden on almost every screen in the overworld, usually someone with a tip, but occasionally a critical item. But all you have to do is kill the enemies and either push a rock or burn something. There's very little in the way of bombing, and the stuff you have to burn is pretty obvious, plus you get unlimited uses of your fast moving fireball, unlike the slow one-time use blue candle. The overworld segments are getting larger, but so far, it hasn't been as daunting as being thrown into a map the size of the one in Zelda. The dungeons haven't been that long, but they're entertaining while they last. There's a fair number of enemies and you can easily run out of health if you don't take it easy. Still, I haven't encountered anything like the screens full of wizzrobes and while I have four dungeons to go, I doubt it'll reach that point. There are traps like certain blocks with blades that shoot out if you get too close. You need to do a little more bombing in the dungeons, but the situations have still been pretty obvious to me. You certainly don't have to go bombing every wall like the 12 years olds discussing this game on message boards claim. I haven't come close to running out of bombs in a long time. You can carry two potions and while I've had to use one (generally in the middle of a boss battle) I've not yet had to use both. Oh, and you get lots and lots of gold. I've got 1100 right now without even trying. And this is despite buying the occasional potions for 300 gold each. If I'm feeling cautious, which was the case in previous dungeons when I had less health, I'll do the dungeon in steps. The display of which areas you've explored is not saved, but the dungeon's treasure, overall map, and boss key are. For dungeon #4, that wasn't necessary as I never felt I was in real danger of a Game Over. That's another thing that makes it a lot easier... using an extremely common item dropped by enemies, you can warp back to your last save point, which is generally very near the dungeon entrance. You can save after getting out with some items, then reset to be back at full health. The #4 boss wasn't anything special. In fact, I can't recall it's exact appearance, but it was long and snake like, with the weak point being the tail. It was kind of in segments, with the segments only loosely connected. You could hit it's head and the head would detach from the rest of the body a ways and then slowly move back. What I did was fireball it into a corner. I kept up the rapid fire attacks so it couldn't get out and alternated with occasional sword strikes until it was dead. It really had no chance. The dungeons' item was steel armor. The next part of the game's overworld reminds me slightly of Mu in Illusion of Gaia. |
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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I located the next and possibly final shield, and I found the entrance to the next dungeon. But you can't get in. I need to find some guy in some cave that
knows the secret of the entrance. I also at some point will be needing to find some sprint shoes, apparently. I seem to be earning less gold than before but
maybe it's because things take longer to kill now. I'm almost positive they raised the prices of items, though, but I can always go back to the earlier
areas to buy them.
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TaroSH |
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Yeah, they jack up the prices as you go along. Also, the best shield and armor are called something like "Best Shield" and "Best Armor."
Real original, but IIRC the best sword actually has a name.
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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I think I've got some eye strain going on. I'm on a week vacation and I've been doing too much game playing and computer using. Despite that,
I'm currently in the middle of watching Raiders of the Lost Ark. I figure I'm way overdue to see the thing.
I reached level 3 in Dragon Warrior and got the tablet. I've never been clear on whether it's actually required or just there to give you some storyline and hints. I'm still toying with the idea of playing through the whole game. I've never used an NES on anything but an RF connection before and so the image seems strikingly clear. The game seems to be completely stable but I wouldn't want to take the cartridge out until I was sure I was done playing. I don't know why, but it seems to be much more unstable than other NES carts I've tried to use recently. |
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Sweetbee.sweetbee |
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I finished off Etrian Odyssey except for fully mapping B29F. I got all of the shop items and monster drops.
Off and on I got about a year out of this game. Money well spent. |
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Bomberguy221 |
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Been a while since I've done one of these... Hmm.
Mario Kart Wii - Mostly got this for my dad. Probably the most enjoyable Mario Kart I've played, since you can now choose if you want to do power slides or not without sacrificing turning ability. I just unlocked all but the extra Mii outfit, and still need a couple of karts. I'm a big fan of riding the motorcycles - they feel a lot more loose, and the tricks are a little more visually interesting. They also brought back a couple of my dad's favorites from years past in the retro cups, so this will be a nice nightly game for him. Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: My Life as a King - ...Yes, I got it. Considering it's the only Wii Ware game that appears anywhere near interesting, and since I like the Crystal Chronicles universe (dumbed down but familiar RPG elements, less emphasis on level-grinding and more on just having fun with the game, simulation elements), I had a feeling I might enjoy this. So, a little bit of a review. I'm currently on day 44, and it's quite the addictive game. While you only have certain plots where you can build, you have more options on what to build where. There's a little strategy involved, because people living near bakeries are happier and people living near academies or temples will have skill sets that will match the careers therein. Visually, it's nothing spectacular, but there's a little more detail in the story. You're essentially building a kingdom with citizens from a another destroyed kingdom populating it, and those citizens all know each other. I'm not quite sure what the interrelations have to do with each other, but if you improve the relationships within a household, you can increase the household's social health and, in return, be thanked with tokens of appreciation. Households are usually single-parent households, but you can later build larger houses that can house both parents and a "third party" (butler/maid, aunt/uncle, etc.). One member in a household is a "novice," whom you can commission to go out and do the things that kings made you do in every other RPG in existence (explore, fight, find stuff, etc.). Unlike the comment I read in the Wii Virtual Console Release thread, you don't "roll around on your money," but instead go talk to citizens to raise morale, pay for research to improve the weapon shops, and build more buildings. Days go by fast, even if you're given a time extension and even though your character manages to run insanely fast. The addictive part comes in from making the kingdom grow. It's oddly entrancing to watch your adventurers come back successful (or failures), bringing with them more elementite (the magic "bricks and mortar" for your houses) or plans on how to build different buildings. Eventually, your new citizens start conversing with each other, building morale by themselves and letting you do more things in less time. I'm up to Chapter III in the story line. I can see this being a fun one for sim fans, but I'm not sure how well-received it would be in this community. The majority of my time was spent running around trying to find people to talk to in an effort to improve family relations. The people I needed to talk to most - parents of my oft-seen adventurers, oddly enough - are holed up in their houses where the morale bonus has no effect. One family aside, the adventurers' lives abroad are doing well while their home lives are rapidly approaching in-feuding. I haven't had a love meter "bottom out" yet, but I worry what kind of repercussions that will hold. My favorite part of RPGs has always been towns, so being able to create one like this has an odd appeal. If you hate towns in RPGs and think they're filled with a bunch of morons who have limited dialog, then... well, you'll hate this game. Otherwise, it's not horrible. I've received enough enjoyment out of it to justify the price tag, which is more than I can say looking at the other games available. |
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TWEETER911 |
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Sweetbee wrote: Well I'm glad I'm not the only one around here who thinks so! ; ) "I flew into the wild and fire. I danced and died a thousand times."
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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Finished dungeon #5 in Neutopia. I finally found the guy to make the dungeon appear. So let me get this straight. The knew he had the secret of the dungeon and
could be a major threat so they didn't kill him. Instead, they chained him up with weak monsters to guard him IN THE ROOM WITH THE SWITCH THAT MAKES THE
DUNGEON APPEAR. I just walked in there and he was like "Dude, just hit that switch there and the dungeon will appear. You can just leave me chained up
here, it's cool. In fact, I'm kind of into it if you know what I mean." Okay, he didn't say all of that.
The dungeon was the hardest one yet but still easy. It had it's equivalent of the Wizzrobes but only one per room max. And you get an item where you can turn stronger enemies into weaker ones and it's pretty common. The boss was a crab that you could only hurt when it was spitting bubbles at you. It didn't do that very much so it took a long time. Unlike the comment I read in the Wii Virtual Console Release thread, you don't "roll around on your money Damn, will ANYONE release the perfect game for Cloudbond?
Last Edited By: CLOUDBOND007
05/20/08 10:31 PM.
Edited 1 times.
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TaroSH |
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I started God of War on Spartan and beat the hydra, which was pretty sweet I must confess.
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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I played a few minutes of that Penny Arcade game. The visuals have come a LONG way since the early videos.
I made a character, got a rake to rake my lawn (because the disembodied voice of the narrator said to) and then a giant fruit fucker crushed my house. Detectives Gabe and Tycho were hot on the trail. First line that amused me: "Cry 'Havoc' and... then you do something to some kind of dog. It'll come to me eventually." |
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Crawl and 1OOO |
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TaroSH wrote: Probably the best part of the game. |
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Crawl and 1OOO |
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What I've heard of Seether struck me as being "generic alternative" (unfortunately, a lot of music that has "evolved" from styles I liked in the '90's seems this way to me), but maybe I'll give them more of a chance.I did hear a recent Seether song on the radio today that I thought was decent. |
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Crawl and 1OOO |
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I don't know if I mentioned this, but I finished The Green Mile awhile ago. Maybe I'll post more about it later. Probably the worst thing that
someone did to another person in that book was when John Coffey, who is basically Jesus (or to use Spike Lee's term, a "magical negro"), infects someone with insanity.
This and some other books try to have poetic justice by having the character that the worst thing happens to be awful (another example would be when Harris turned Hannibal Lecter into a vigilante). This probably says more about me than the books, but I just don't think it works. In a fit of reckless optimism (as though I could read two books while traveling), I also bought The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon in San Diego. I'm about 140 pages into it. It's not exactly easy reading. The story does not have a plot. A girl is lost in the woods, then ... she's lost in the woods. I get the sense, reading some of these later books of his, that Stephen King is trying to challenge himself. Maybe he finds it easy or passe to write a story with a hook and a gripping plot. So, instead, he writes stories that based on an unworkable idea and tries to make them work. Like, "Can I write a story in which the protagonist is in bed the entire time?" (Gerald's Game) With TGWLTG, by having it be about a girl lost in the woods, he can't really write dialogue (no one for her to talk to), no real plot (since she just continues to be stuck in the woods), and he has to constantly write descriptions of the landscape (this is something that killed Lord of the Rings for me). He still tries to maintain interest somehow. He's suggesting that something is watching her. He gets around the 'no dialogue' restriction a bit by having her recall sayings from her colorful friend Pepsi, and she's starting to hallucinate Tom Gordon himself, who occasionally talks to her. And (though we don't see these characters often) the story starts with her in the company of her family, and occasionally we see what they're doing. But most of the story is very minor events. She's bit by bugs, she covers herself with mud. She drinks water from a stream, she vomits and has diarrhea. She hits a wasp nest. He has her follow a stream: She thinks all water leads to the sea, though it ends up leading to a swamp. She sees a deer that had been torn apart. She listens to baseball games on her walkman. With three Stephen King books in a couple of weeks, I'm more caught up with his oeuvre. Not counting Black House (and I doubt I will ever even attempt to read it again), I'll only be missing Lisey's Story, Colorado Kid, Cell, and Duma Key. |
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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I played a little Neutopia tonight but didn't make a lot of progress. I found a bomb upgrade, letting me carry 16 in total. My next goal was to find the
Falcon Boots but I looked everywhere and pushed and bombed everything I could think of. Based on what one of the NPC's said, I thought I was in the right
part of the overworld but I couldn't figure anything out. I finally checked a guide and found that I had been over that screen a number of times but what I
must have not done was kill every enemy. Probably because one of the enemies is like a Zora where it sits in the water and shoots fireballs and is generally
bothersome to kill.
After I got the boots I was granted entrance to dungeon #6. I ended up using both of my potions and had to retreat. I did find the dungeon map and the boss key, but I still need to find the dungeon treasure and make my way to the boss. First, I have to backtrack and buy two fresh potions and maybe some more bombs. The dungeon has screens with multiple Wizzrobe-type enemies but the ring item still makes them easy as pie. It turns them into weaker creatures which then have a tendancy to drop more of the ring items, so I've never had to actually deal with the screen full of wizards. I don't stress out about using a guide as much as I used to, but it's a little disappointing since I made it to this point without one. Added GPT Kappa.
Last Edited By: CLOUDBOND007
05/22/08 2:31 AM.
Edited 1 times.
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Psycho Penguin |
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I've been playing Lord of the Rings: The Third Age for PS2, and I must say it is one addictive game, due to the fact you can level up a lot of things. Each
time you use a skill in one of your character's 2 skill sets, you get 1 skill point. Earn enough skill points and you unlock the next skill. There are an
additional three special items you can equip that help you earn skills too: light (mostly healing), dark (stuff like dispel, drain, and spirit attacks), and
item crafting. When you learn a skill from these items, you keep them for the rest of the game, even without the item being equipped. Right now, I am trying to
learn a bunch of skills as I appear to be near the end of the game. 85% done, 27 hours or so in.
And I don't know JACK about the movie or book series, either.
My FAQs and Reviews
Proud Mac User! |
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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I played that game on Xbox when it came out. I liked it at first because the combat was like FFX's, but I grew less interested. It seemed kind of like it
was technically fine but there was no soul, like a game made by a computer familiar with Lord of the Rings. I also didn't like that you were playing as a
bunch of random characters nobody's ever heard following the real heroes around but never catching up. And nothing ever really happened. You'd kill
some monsters then get a movie clip from one of the films and a message from Gandalf, and repeat. That's how I remember it being at the point I stopped
playing, anyway. It's been quite a long time.
I beat the 6th dungeon of Neutopia today. I found the Strongest Armor inside. The boss is an armored creature with three heads. The heads leave his body and fly around the room. Pretty easy to kill them. If this was a Zelda game, the heads would have shot fireballs or something, but it's not and they don't. I made it to the next part of the overworld, the flying castle that flies. |
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TaroSH |
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Well, in God of War, I got the Medusa spell, made it to Athens being trampled by Ares, got one health increase, and scared the woman off the balcony.
I bet I'm nearing the screaming oracle! |
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Psycho Penguin |
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I beat The Third Age. I didn't mind the fact that they used random characters, CB, because like I said, I am not familiar with the series at all. Also, I
liked its level and skill system better than FFX's sphere grid. Not to say The Third Age is as good as FFX, because it isn't, but I enjoyed it all the
same.
I decided I want to get through more RPGs, so I picked up my 18 hour Tales of the Abyss file and now it's at 20 hours and I am starting to remember what to do. Yay.
My FAQs and Reviews
Proud Mac User! |
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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Finished dungeon #7. That was much tougher than anything that's come before. Not harder than anything in Zelda 1, but the overall complexity of the map
combined with the strength of the enemies meant that I had to handle it in stages, retreating to recover when necessary. I got the Strongest Shield inside,
which is supposed to be able to reflect a wizard's attack. But as I've said, I've never really had to fight the wizards anyway, so whether having
it actually means anything will depend on the next and final dungeon.
The boss of #7 would have been really tough if not for the fact that it dies after a small number of hits. It's only vulnerable for a few moments at a time and it's got these things rotating around it making it hard to get close without taking damage. This game has a bit of a cruel streak as I've noticed increasingly powerful random enemies in the room after the boss where the medallion (triforce piece equivalent) is. It's usually only one enemy, but it's like they expect some people to have made it through the boss with only one or two units of health and then die before they get the treasure. I remember I once defeated Kary in FF1 with only the white mage alive and I got into a random battle and died before I could touch the orb and warp out. |
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Crawl and 1OOO |
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220 pages into Tom Gordon, and it's less than 300 pages long, so I'm almost done.
Little Trisha turned off from her eastward journey, missing some cottages that would have been past a marsh she wanted to avoid. Stephen King then didn't feel like describing her next few days in as much detail as the first few, so he summarizes them in a few paragraphs. She then finds an abandoned road that had been made in 1905. |
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Facilitypro |
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I want to a bookstore a couple weeks ago and just walked around looking. I ended up getting Stephen King's It and a Nirvana biography. From what I've
seen of the Nirvana book, it's disappointing. I did, however, read through It in about 2 weeks and enjoyed it.
85% of video games are above the median in quality.
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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Finished Neutopia! It's the first TG16 game I've completed.
Dungeon #8 was very long but didn't seem as hard as #7 overall. There was a nifty item that doesn't really have a Zelda equivalent. It's a bell that opens sealed doors and reveals staircases in situations where you'd normally have to defeat all enemies in the room or push a block. It still took me forever to find the boss key. Boss of that dungeon was the toughest in the game. He's not vulnerable for long and takes a ton of hits, even though I got the Strongest Sword before fighting him. I had to use both potions and my health was about half depleted. This game takes the less common approach of having you fight the last boss at your leisure without having to go through a dungeon or anything to reach him. I remembered what Codie (I think) said about how it was easier to just fight him than to try to use strategy. I had to use a potion or two but it was easier than the previous boss (they're both Dirth, but one is a phantom version or something). When you rescue the princess she says we should go back to the shrine because all the villagers are waiting there. How the hell do you know? You've been locked up the entire time. It wasn't a great game but I think it's one that's worth playing for fans of the original Zelda, especially for the virtual console price. I enjoyed it more than GTA 4, Mario Kart Wii, Drake's Fortune, most new stuff in general. I'll play Neutopia II but I might not do so right away. I'm not very good at shooters (or more like not patient enough to GET good at them) but I've been thinking about getting Lords of Thunder on virtual console. Maybe I can download Neutopia II as well and play them both so I have a little variety. I also finished watching Raiders of the Lost Ark tonight. I started enjoying it more near the end, but it's weird, because I've apparently seen the end of this movie on TV before and forgotten about it until now.
Last Edited By: CLOUDBOND007
05/23/08 4:28 AM.
Edited 2 times.
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Bomberguy221 |
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Mario Kart Wii - Beat a couple of my ghosts. No experts unlocked.
FFCC: My Life as a King - Up to Day 83. I'm gradually replacing the small houses with spacious houses. Think of it like upgrading from a house to a hotel in Monopoly - more money, more space. It also introduces 2 more family members to each family, meaning my town becomes that much more alive. The streets are getting really crowded. I have to admit, one thing that's bothersome about this game is that it's very easy to hit walls. I mean, I can't get my town to grow any more until I get another morale sphere, and I know exactly where to get that. But I needed better armor (which I just got) and other things had to happen first. I've maxed out on pay grades for my adventurers, and I've hired the max number of adventurers I can get, so it all falls on me to get them the stuff they need. |
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da dick |
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crappity crap. just spent about 6 hours virus/spyware scanning, and backing up my data. would have saved maybe an hour or 2 if i didn't decide to back up
some of the music files and "interesting pictures" too.. and if i didn't fall asleep while watching a "whose line..." re-run, while
waiting for the anti-spyware scan.
now, i'm gonna register my UPS, and check out what stuff i can get with my reward points for a store membership i bought into just to get a discount for the UPS. i hope they don't spam my email too much. or even worse, sell my particulars to chinkieland telemarketers. and then, maybe i'll actually find some time to re-watch "control"(the biopic of ian curtis and joy division) with the volume turned up... or play around with more mechwarrior 4 configurations. arhh.. my laundry's not done yet. ... looks like my membership ID is still invalid?!? === read fable 2 is going to suck 'cause that idiot is turning it into a the sims wannabe. i need a fulltime job in the game to pay for my adventuring?!? sounds too much like real tedious life.
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CLOUDBOND007 |
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Well, I did get Neutopia II but I've gotten a little side tracked trying out Wario Land 1. I've never really played it before, and I've been more
and more interested in exploring older games I've missed. The level design is not nearly as simplistic as I'd expected. If they've got something
like the Thwomp ride in stage 4, then hopefully there'll be some really good stuff later on. Especially since this game seems to abandon the nonlinear easy
crapfest that was Mario Land 2 (which really had only one good level, the last one). I'm up to the first boss level now.
They're also coming out with Xbox Live Arcade games soon, some kind of tavern games set in the Fable world, where when you win money, you can use it in Fable 2. Seems kind of lame because th | |||