Showing posts with label Pandemic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pandemic. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 April 2020

Last Week's Games: Pandemic, Arcania, Assassin's Creed 2

I’ve slowed down on the painting since last week. I made a start on six of the Terminators from the Space Hulk set, but after the third rather thin layer of red paint I put on, I didn’t take that any further. I probably will this week – but I struggled to find the inclination last week. There were a few different reasons for that, including the fact that I was enjoying playing some other games in the evenings!

Not looking good for Europe...
At one point me and Kirsty had another go at Pandemic so that we could try to beat it again with proper regard to the rules this time. Some of you may remember we tried the game a few weeks ago but got two rather important points wrong: you’re supposed to draw two infection cards after an Epidemic, and for that reason, we didn’t get a single Outbreak; and you’re only allowed to give or take a card if you’re in the city of the card you’re trading, unless you’re the researcher which neither of us were. So, we tried again with those rules in place and the game beat us this time; we arrived at the end of the Outbreak track but there were only two cards left in the draw deck so we would have lost the following turn anyway. It didn’t help that we’d got a particularly harsh draw at the start of the game and an early Epidemic; both New York and London had three infection cubes on them and as they’re next to each other, when those cards came up again they were a part of a triple outbreak across Europe and North America, and the blue cubes even found their way to South America.
The Shadow Beast.,,
I spent a couple of evenings playing Arcania on the PS4. One of the problems I run in to when I’m blogging long-form RPGs is finding things to say about it without repeating myself; if you’ve been following my blog for a while you’ll know that by the standards of most of what you can buy for the PS4, Arcania is pretty poor. And yet this is the game I’m sticking with! I’m not far away from the end of the game now (the target level for the end of the game is 30 and I’m at 25,) and I think that, for all its faults, Arcania does have some positive qualities. I’ve never particularly liked Crafting systems, for example, so it’s nice to play a game where I don’t necessarily feel obliged to use it. But I think the main benefit for me is the linearity. This is no open world game where you can wander around the map becoming hopelessly lost and confused; it’s always obvious where you’re supposed to be and what you’re supposed to be doing. The dungeons are challenging in their own way, and often quite fun. And while there are side quests, there are not too many of them – they don’t necessarily distract from the main storyline. Sadly, the main storyline is also marred by the cutscenes not working properly, and I missed some crucial pieces of information – thankfully you can read the finer points of these in your quest log – but there are some redeeming qualities. The voice acting, for example, while far from great, somehow manages to convey the urgency of your mission. And the unnamed lead character, while a complete doofus in many situations, has a B-movie-like self-awareness – almost as though he knows he’s in a video game. I might even get to the end of this one!
Just done the bit with the Golden Mask...
Contrast that with the other long-form game I’ve been playing a lot of lately: Assassin’s Creed 2. While this game is far more competently put together, Ubisoft were finding their stride in creating huge open-world sandbox games, with plenty to do in them, yes, but a lot of it feels like it’s padding out the game. I guess it represents good value for people who bought this game new and that might be the only one they buy for three months, but for me there’s quite a lot of unnecessary faffing about in Assassin’s Creed games. Still, I’m close to the end of it now!

Monday, 16 March 2020

Last Week's Games: Pandemic, Pathfinder, Doom and Mordheim


I managed to make quite a bit of time for playing games this week! Unusually, I’m going to talk about the Hobby games first…
Let the madness begin...
A little on the nose, given what’s happening in the world right now (If you’re reading this after the fact, the world is currently in a state of confusion and panic over the Covid-19 virus) but Kirsty and I had a go with Pandemic over the weekend. Some people like this game more than others but when I’ve played it, I’ve enjoyed it. We certainly had a good time stamping out the diseases across the map – Kirsty was fortunate enough to choose the Medic, who could take out all the disease cubes on one section and is very good to have early in the game. We certainly made more use out of that than my ability – I’d drawn the Contingency Planner, who can pull an event card from the discard pile and use it again later. We beat the game, though on reflection we got some of the rules wrong. I’d forgotten that we were supposed to infect the cities after drawing an Epidemic card, and that we were only supposed to swap cards if we were in the city of the cards we were swapping. The latter, at least, would definitely have made a difference to the outcome of the game! We enjoyed it, nonetheless, and we’ll have another go soon.
Also, over the weekend, I continued with Pathfinder: Rise of the Runelords. Currently they are trekking through the Vaults of Greed, and it was very satisfying to give them a dragon hoard to distribute, and to flatten one of my players with a trap – especially as he plays the kind of impulsive character that would be susceptible to triggering them! He was a little more cautious from then on. I then had a laugh with the Mephits, who seemed more at home playing in the bath than causing a threat, but I have a feeling the group enjoyed it a lot more than trying to fight them. We’re all still enjoying it but there is talk of pausing the campaign for a while and letting someone else have a go at running another game; we’ll see how that goes. I like running games, but I’ve not been able to play for a while!
I finally beat the Deimos Lab on Doom and I’m now at the Control centre. This is an interesting map, and I’m enjoying it, but the difficulty is bogging me down and I’m finding it hard to make any significant amount of progress. But Doom is the kind of game I can come back to whenever I like; the plot is very straightforward, and I don’t need to worry too much about remembering important points!
From humble beginnings...
Also, I made some progress with Mordheim: City of the Damned. With enough confidence in my Mercenary warband to tackle the fourth campaign mission on the bridge, I gave it a go and beat it quite easily (to be fair, my warband is vastly over-levelled now!) None of my men were put out of action, which is quite rare as even on my best day at least one of them usually drops. This is now the most progress I’ve ever made in the game; I came close with the Sisters of Sigmar but gave up after the fourth mission bugged out. It appears that I’m now in the second half of the game, so we’ll see how that goes. I had a go with another of the regular missions, but hubris got the better of me and some of my men ended up dropping to a rival Mercenary warband – usually the easiest faction to deal with.
Finally, I was pleased to be able to have some time in both Phoenix Games in Stourbridge and Warlords and Wizards in Netherton at different points in the week to paint a fresh squad of Chaos Space Marine Raptors. I haven’t quite finished them yet – got some finishing touches to put on their champion – but they’re looking alright, if somewhat different to the box art! I’m also carrying a small number of World Bearers around in hope of a game…