Sunday, August 22, 2010

Metal Gear Solid 2

It's taken me a long long LONG time to finally beat Metal Gear Solid 2 but I've done it! I was supposed to finish it over the summer but that never happened, I've been wanting to play it but never got the motivation to play it. (I blame it on Team Fortress 2 and World of Warcraft.)

I ended up playing it on very easy so I could get through the game and hear the story. Story aside the game play is very similar to the first Metal Gear with the addition of the very important ability to switch into a first person view.

Because it's very similar to the first Metal Gear in game play my first complaint is how clunky the controls maybe at times. Though you're not exactly driving a tank like you would be in Resident Evil but sometimes it's far from perfect when you're trying to grab and opponent from behind and snap his neck. You will also find yourself using your gun in first person most of the time also because the overhead shooting is again, rather clunky.

Game play sticks to the formula the first game made and improves on it.

After playing the game, it's not playing the game that you really remember, it's the narrative. Throughout the game, the protagonist Raiden (Jack) converses with his girlfriend Rose, an analyst who got herself involved in his mission. Contacting Rose on your codec allows you to save the game and a dialog regarding Raiden and Rose's relationship usually follows after your save. These conversations begin light hearted, evolve into something more of complaining and a bump in their relationship to a total cluster mind-fuck. (pardon the unclassy language but it's the perfect way to put it.)

From these dialogs and other conversations you learn the dark story of Raiden's past. The darkness doesn't end with Raiden's past; the game further delves into Otacon's character. Though the time focused on Otacon is brief the player sympathizes with him, especially after the death of his little sister. (A lot more sad than the death of Aerith if you ask me.)

Characters aside, near the last quarter or third of the game, strong themes begin to be expressed. After knowledge of the Patriots is learned conversations about history as we know it is discussed. How throughout time libraries have been burned, precious tomes and scrolls lost and destroyed affect history and what it is now. Except in this day and age, digital information can never really be destroyed, just sitting there for anyone to some day see. Useless information, opposing ideals to what these Patriots want, radical ideas and religion. Even though it is a game, such things made me wonder what was real or not. If what we're being taught now is just one big censored fabrication.

As with every Metal Gear game, I tell people that it's not everyone's cup of tea. It's definitely made with a certain audience in mind, so it's especially not made with the casual gamer in mind. If you ever get the chance to play this game, pay close attention to the character development, story and themes expressed in game.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

3DS-PSP

It looks as if the Nintendo 3DS's design is finalized. The 3DS and PSP both feature some form of an analog stick (nub and nub-like thing.) The problem I see is that there lacks a second analog stick. This either limits the kind of games the handheld can have or makes playing it rather difficult, this statement is made with FPS in mind. There are several shooters out on the market for the PSP, and my opinion is that they do NOT play very well with just one analog stick.

Though the 3DS has a way around such a problem because of its touch screen (Metroid Hunters), an FPS could work out very well now since the 3DS has considerably powerful graphics. There's innovation, but there's also sticking with the familiar to allows those not too fond of new things to still game comfortably.

Which leads to the question. Would the 3DS benefit significantly with the addition of a second analog stick?

Monday, August 16, 2010

End of Summer

So Summer has made me totally neglect my blog, but now that the school year is rolling back again I'll be procrastinating and reading up on all of the latest news.

I hope I'll now be able to update regularly now that summer isn't going to be distracting me anymore.