I had never played Civilization V prior to last week. Not to any meaningful degree, at least. I grew up with Nintendo and, to a lesser extent, Sega (plus Microsoft, come the aughts) providing my gaming goodness. I was a toddler when the original Civilization hit computers in 1991. Going from fast-paced kiddie-crack like Sonic on a 3-inch Game Gear screen to a massive, slow-paced strategy title like Civ would have been like putting Power Rangers and Mad Men back-to-back on Fox Kids. It was so far off my radar I don't think I even knew it existed.
I can keep making excuses if you like, but the fact is the closest I had come to playing a Civ game by the time Sid Meier and co. deigned to bestow Civ V upon the world was starting a game of The Sims once.
But this industry being what it is, I began to feel left out by my own indifference to the strategy genre. Here's a thing that millions of people are going wild over, and I'm just sitting here playing shooters and RPGs. So I purposefully grabbed Civ V on Steam and dove in. Little did I know how engrossing I'd find it. I mean, I had heard from others—but nine hours into my first play session, as the sun began to rise, it occurred to me that I hadn't really known.
Here I leave a record of my first few attempts to play Civ V.
I was taken aback by the opening cinematic. This was not at all what I was expecting. Sweeping vistas, an intimate view of a life-changing chat between father and son—this is what Civilization is all about? Not just the complex machinations of empires, but the personal stories of those within as well?
Heh. No, not really. That was fine, though. Moving on, I was relieved to see so many tutorials on the main menu, not anxious to delve into a wiki just yet. The learn-as-you-play option caught my eye. There's no better teaching than doing, right?
The tutorial began like I would soon discover most games do: settle a city, set your warriors scurrying about, and good luck with those bandits. I was cast as "wise and puissant" King Ramkhamhaeng of Siam and given a short history lesson. That's nice, I thought. Teach the kids something. I assumed being King Ramkalongamon would have some effect on my game, but so far I had on idea what that would be. The start screen told me at some point my warriors would get to ride elephants. Isn't that nice? Should be fun for them.
"This is a good place to found a city," a calming female voice said through my speakers. I thanked her, poked around until I located the "found city" button, and watched as my Siamese settlers erected a tightly-packed slum of vaguely Asian-looking huts and towers. My warriors, loitering about still by the start point (because they were lazy, I assumed), towered over them. They towered over the trees, too, for that matter. Presumably that's why they're warriors and not settlers.
The voice told me to direct the warriors to explore, so I did. It sounded like she knew what she was talking about. Off went my giant warriors into the Fog of War (which I knew about from playing Advance Wars) as my city set about producing yet more giant warriors. Can never have enough of those. For research I chose "animal husbandry," because what the hell even is that.
Several explored ruins, decimated bandit camps, and unsuccessful attempts to get the warriors to slaughter herds of cattle later, I encountered my first real opposition in the form of the city-state Ragusa. The voice told me I could go to war with them if I wanted, but something about her tone suggested that might not be the best idea.
Is this game not about conquering everything in sight indiscriminately? I was going to have to adjust my expectations.
Or not. Out of the fog strolled Genghis Khan himself—now this was more like it! "Treat us with respect and you may live to see another sunrise," he said from astride his magnificent black warhorse. "Hehe," I replied, clicking "publicly denounce Genghis Khan." The man's a monster, after all.
Instead of drawing his sword, though, he did his best jilted lover impression and pouted at me, "So that's how it is, then." I thought this dude was supposed to be hardcore. What gives? I needed to take things one step further, so I declared war on the Mongol immediately. My unstoppable force of two warrior units pincer-attacked on the outskirts of my capital (and only) city, the majestic but apparently miniature Sukhothai, decimating Khan's pathetic unit seemingly without effort. The city even bombarded them with little matchstick-sized arrows.
At this point I took a mental inventory of my progress. I'd just declared war on one of the most infamous and cruel military commanders in history, I'd researched mining, pottery and animal husbandry (fat lot of good that did—there hadn't been a single equestrian wedding yet as far as I could tell), and my powerful empire had all of one single, tiny city. So far I had learned that Civ V was not exactly what I had expected, and that tutorial difficulty was probably going to be pretty boring.
I quit without saving and resolved to buckle down and do the individual tutorials one-by-one. An hour or so later, now with a much firmer grasp of exactly how to play, I started anew.
For my first real game, I chose Commander George cherry-tree Washington because 'Murica, and don't-you-forget-it. His bonuses included B17 bombers and minutemen with badass tri-corn hats, plus something called "Manifest Destiny" that I vaguely remembered from history class. I think it means 'Murica gets to do whatever it wants because God says so. "Yep," I thought. This should work.
I didn't care what the game wanted me to do. Diplomacy? Science, culture? If it didn't want to be about pillaging, I was going to make it about pillaging. Besides, I was still playing on the tutorial difficulty. Sue me. I set about building as many cities as possible to fuel my future war machine, which I envisioned swarming over the hexagonal landscape in a tide of devastation for any and all who stood in my way.
City-states were swallowed up like greasy hot dogs on the Fourth of July. Hanoi, Brussels, Budapest, Tyre—all fell under the might of my formidable 'Murican forces. When it came time to topple empires, Songhai came first, because it was closest. Bad luck, Emperor Askia. I tried to get Catherine of Russia and her needlessly revealing dress to declare war against him with me, but despite my gifts of gold, she refused. So naturally Russia was next.
I let King Ramadamadingdong keep his Siamese empire intact a bit longer out of loyalty from my days spent wearing his flip-flops in the last game. Also, I couldn't figure out how to cross the ocean. Some Wiki-ing and astronomy lessons later, Siam too fell to the strange mix of guns and swords (not all my units had quite made it to the industrial era) wielded by Lady Liberty.
After a lengthy but surprisingly easy campaign against Genghis Khan's Mongolian forces (tutorial difficulty, I reminded myself), I conquered India as quickly as possible. Taking up arms against Gandhi was dirty business—even for me. But after 300-something turns, it was over. The world was mine. I had conquered every capital city on the map and achieved a military victory.
Wait, "military victory?" Does that mean there are other kinds? Okay, I thought. Maybe playing on the easiest possible setting did not really give me a representative experience here.
For my third playthrough I crawled back to King RaspberryMuffin of Siam. Luckily he had no recollection of what I had done to him in my last playthrough, and accepted my leadership readily. I assumed the extra food and culture he received from friendly city-states would help in my attempt at a normal-difficulty, non-psychopathic game.
My settlers settled, my warriors roamed, and my workers did whatever workers do. Bandits posed a much greater threat on the higher setting, but I quickly compensated and drove back their pathetic hordes.
I quickly set about to exploring and attempting to befriend the assortment of city-states and empires scattered across my continent. I found Sydney to the north; it was plagued by bandits, whom I took care of. I had their everlasting gratitude. Super.
Suddenly it struck me that I had absolutely no idea how to win if not by the sword. I checked the wiki. So I have to build a space shuttle, adopt the most social policies, become head of the U.N., or simply have the most points when time runs out. Well that last one is boring, but I might as well shoot for one of the other three.
The thing is, though, Persia—my biggest neighbor—really started to get my goat after a while. Between them and Bucharest, I couldn't expand eastward at all. And Persia, being Persia, rejected my every attempt at friendship. The god-king Xerxes isn't in charge in Civ V, but he might as well be for all the progress I made with them. Gifts, treaties, declarations of friendship—my every advance was rebutted. Maybe it's a sign—a sign that I should conquer Persia, raze its cities and make its leader, Darius I, kneel before my golden throne.
Yeah, I'm going with that. But that was all I was going to do. I'd just conquer this entire continent (Sydney has to go as well, obviously, but that's what they get for siding with Persia, right?). Then I'd totally be friends with everyone else I met and get elected head of the U.N. It was the perfect plan.
What I didn't account for was that while I had been failing at making friends, Persia had been creating a hell of an army.
I captured two of Persia's cities, but my new subjects weren't exactly stoked to have me, and morale was at an all-time low. Those Persian forces came down hard, and it was all I could do to pump out enough units to defend my own borders, much less build circuses and theaters to make my own citizens happy. It was war time! What did they expect? Yet my fighters' spirits were down, and the war is not going well. Darius would only accept my surrender if I give him back the cities I took, and that wasn't not about to happen.
Then out of the mists strode my savior: it's Gandhi! Sorry I just destroyed your empire in my last game. No hard feelings, right? "It is hard to find worthy friends in this world," he uttered sagely. Too true, buddy. Now how's about we declare joint war on Persia, since we're such good friends and all?
"I must decline," he said. Well how about if I give you 500 gold? Then will you declare war on Persia? "The answer is still no." Well shit. That was all the persuasion I had left, and I was toast after that. The Persian war machine was too powerful, and apparently their propaganda department was working over time, because several other forces joined the good fight against little old me as well. Oh, I hung on for quite a while after that, but no matter how many forces I built up, morale remained low and I was always outgunned.
Rather than face defeat, though, I did what any gamer with a job would: packed it in and quit. What did I learn from these experiences? That I suck at Civilization. Also, that you can never have enough musketmen. Now it's time for some light reading before I try again.
Via GamesRadar, this is the leaked first trailer for Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag.
In the trailer, a grizzled pirate describes Captain (and assassin) Edward Kenway.
"There was a time I thought myself the deadliest scourge of these seas," the pirate says. "But this man..."
We then see Kenway hacking, slashing, and doing his assassin thing. The trailer ends on a silhouette of Kenway.
At the end of the trailer, we see a slide saying Assassin's Creed IV will be out October 29 and that it's "also coming on next-gen consoles." Logos on the bottom: PS3, PS4, Xbox 360, Wii U, PC.
UPDATE: The trailer has been taken down. Here's the pertinent screencap:
We'll have more on Assassin's Creed IV this Monday.
What's happened in the business of video games this past week ...
QUOTE | "Imagine if the NRA had the same relationship with the gun industry that the ESRB has with the game industry."—Gearbox Software boss Randy Pitchford talking about the ongoing gun debate in America and how the NRA should behave like the game industry's ESRB.
QUOTE | "I failed two big games, I probably lost €10 million between these two productions, but it's OK because I did other things that went better."—Pauline Jacquey, managing director of Ubisoft's Reflections studio, talking about what it's like at the studio working on Watch Dogs.
STAT | 58%—Percentage of GDC attendees whose next games will be coming out for smartphones or tablets; this compares to only 14% who say they are working on an Xbox 360 game, with even less interest in other consoles like Wii U.
QUOTE | "We're building into all of our games the ability to pay for things along the way."—EA CFO Blake Jorgenson, talking about how all of EA's games will be featuring in-game purchasing.
STAT | 500,000—Number of subscribers that EVE Online now has, according to publisher CCP; the ten-year-old game has just launched in China and released their 18th free expansion.
QUOTE | "Certain developers view the ESRB as a censor ... We feel that effective content labeling can actually foster creativity."—ESRB president Patricia Vance, talking about fighting the image the ESRB has with some in the industry.
STAT | $1.2 billion—Amount of money that Sony just sold their Tokyo office building for; Sony will remain there for five years under a lease agreement with the new owner.
QUOTE | "Console games are getting deeper, challenges are mounting and costs are rising."—Mark Strassman, VP of entertainment industry strategy for Autodesk, talking about how Autodesk is trying to make their products more available to everybody.
STAT | 10 million—Number of visits the free-to-play game Aurora has had since its debut in 2011; the game is available in PlayStation's virtual world Home.
Artist Marinko Milosevski has created another trio of Legend of Zelda posters, adding A Link to the Past, Twilight Princess and Skyward Sword to the list of games that he's created designs for.
That list also includes games like Metroid and Metal Gear Solid, which, like Zelda, still have not been made into awful Hollywood movies yet. Although you can argue that every Metal Gear game already is an awful action film, but that's a different discussion.
Video Games [Marinko Illustration]
In July 2011, after a somewhat clueless Al Gore keynoted the Games for Change conference in New York, Kotaku wrote that the former vice president should try playing a video game. In March 2013, Gore announced that he had done one better and created a video game instead. And guess what it's about?
Okay, so Reality Drop is not really a video game. It's more like a gamified (yeah, I said it) database of science-backed climate change facts called "reality drops" that you can easily copy and paste into Tweets, Youtube comments, and your poor friends' Facebook walls. In fact, the more you flood the internet with truth, the more points you get.
So what are you waiting for? Get spamming! Oh, and please check out the video of Gore trying to work a computer. It's pretty killer.
Hey, Kotaku. It's me, Mike Rougeau, again. I'm going to be your editor for the weekend. That means that Owen likely got fired again, or maybe he's just missing. I honestly have no idea.
In case you don't know me, I'll reintroduce myself: my name is Mike Rougeau. That's me and Ricky the Dog again up top in the Best Photoshop Ever. I like video games. I write about them fairly often (sometimes every day). My words have appeared (and, in select cases, continue to appear) in Complex Magazine, TechRadar, 1UP, G4, IFC, and many other publications.
Last time I was here we discussed some quite serious stuff. Things like the apocalypse, gamers' responses to tragedies, sketchy game developers, and even declaring war on the NRA.
But we also got to talk about some of my favorite games (this is a gaming website, after all), including Dark Souls, Little Inferno, and, uh, Avatar 2.
With nothing quite so pressing or heavy going on this weekend, we'll have to settle for things like the PlayStation 4, Assassin's Creed, freemium games, Fox News's sloppy reporting, and Al Gore. Watch out for these topics and more over the next couple days as I leave my fleeting but satisfactory mark on your lives once again.
Oh, and I'll try not to write anything about Dark Souls for a change this time. (that picture doesn't count). Let's get started!
Kotaku's twice weekly roundup of the best discounts, combinations, offers and incentives in video gaming is brought to you by Dealzon.
Green Man Gaming
• Tomb Raider Collection is $24 (list $60). Includes 9 Tomb Raider games: Tomb Raider I-IV, Tomb Raider: Legend, Tomb Raider: Anniversary, and Tomb Raider: Underworld.
• The Last Remnant is $3 (next best $15). Offer ends today at noon Eastern.
• From noon Eastern today until noon Sunday Hitman: Absolution Professional Edition is $10 (list is $50).
• Sonic the Hedgehog Bundle is $21.56 (list $108). Inlcludes 10 Sonic games.
• SEGA Retro Bundle (PC Bundle) is $16.87 (list $84)
• Chivalry: Medieval Warfare is $10 (next best $25)
• Mar. 15 release Sniper Ghost Warrior 2 is $22.50 (list $30)
• Mar. 22 release Resident Evil 6 is $30 (list $40)
• Apr. 2 release Defiance is $45 (next best $60)
GameFly
• Medal of Honor Warfighter is $11.99 (next best $40)
• Alan Wake is $5.99 (next best $30)
• The Darkness 2 is $5.99 (next best $30)
• Nuclear Dawn is $3.59 (next best $10)
• Postal 3 is $3 (list $15)
• Indie Royale's Mash Bundle is $5.79 at the time of writing. Includes Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People, Guns of Icarus Online, Kung Fu Strike: The Warrior's Rise, KRUNCH, and Delve Deeper. Each game separately would total $65. [Dealzon]
GOG.com is selling a Daedalic Adventures Pack (6 PC downloads) is $52.44. The pack includes Deponia, Deponia 2: Chaos on Deponia, Edna & Harvey: The Breakout + Harvey's New Eyes, Dark Eye: The Chains of Satinav, The Whispered World, and A New Beginning - Final Cut. Separately they'd cost $105. You can also purchase the downloads on sale individually.
GameStop
• RIFT: Storm Legion is $19.99 (list $40)
• Mass Effect 3 is $19.99 (list $30)
Steam
• Mark of the Ninja is $4.99 (list $15)
• War Of The Roses is $4.99 (next best $30)
GamersGate
• Two Worlds 2 game and DLCs are discounted by 70% this weekend.
• Kane and Lynch 2: Dog Days (PC download) is $3.74 (list $15)
NewEgg has a $10 coupon code for select PC pre-order games (DVD physical copies). The best deals are:
• Mar. 5 release Sim City: Limited Edition is $49.99, free shipping (list $60)
• Mar. 12 release StarCraft II: Heart of the Swarm is $29.99, free shipping (list $40)
• Mar. 26 release Final Fantasy XIV: Realm Reborn is $19.99, free shipping (list $30)
Origin has an Everything Dead Space sale with discounts up to 50% Off. Dead Space 3 on PC download, Xbox 360 and PS3 is $41.99, elsewhere $48 and up.
Xbox Live Ultimate Game Sale has games on sale from Feb 26 through March 4th. Each day brings a new series of games on demand. Past installments include the Assassin's Creed series, Resident Evil, and Call of Duty.
Today's games on sale are as follows. All games are 50% off, except for Dead Island at 67% off.
• Batman Arkham City for $14.99
• Borderlands for $9.99
• Borderlands 2 for $29.99
• Fable III for $9.99
• Dead Island for $9.99
• Fallout New Vegas for $9.99
• Portal 2 for $14.99
• Red Dead Redemption for $14.99
• Dishonored for $29.99
Best Buy has $0.99 Pre-owned PS2 Games with free store pickup.
• Kingdom Hearts 3D: Dream Drop Distance (3DS) is $22.99, free shipping (next best $32)
Amazon
• Aliens: Colonial Marines (360, PS3) is $47.03, free shipping (next best $60)
• Resident Evil 6 Archives Edition (360) is $44.99, free shipping (next best $75)
GameFly Pre-owned games
• Prototype 2 (360, PS3)d is $12.99 (next best $29)
• The Amazing Spider-Man (Wii) is $8.99, free shipping (next best $20)
Sony Vita games
• ModNation Racers: Road Trip is $9.97 with $5 shipping (next best $20)
• wipEout 2048 is $9.97 with $5 shipping (next best $19)
• Little Deviants is $9.97 with $5 shipping (next best $17)
• Hot Shots Golf: World Invitational is $9.97 with $5 shipping (next best $19)
• Nintendo Wii U ZombiU Deluxe Set is $350.99, free shipping from NewEgg. You'll need to check out with V.me by Visa for the coupon to work. Normally $390. [Dealzon]
• God of War Saga with a Dualshock 3 Wireless Controller and PlayStation Plus 1-Month Trial is $47.99, free shipping from Best Buy. Cheapest ever by $12. List price is $60. [Dealzon]
• HP Envy dv7t-7300 laptop with Ivy Bridge Quad Core i7-3630QM, 8GB RAM, GeForce GT 635M 2GB, Blu-ray, and Windows 8 is $824.99 with $9.99 shipping from HP. List price is $975.
• Lenovo IdeaPad Y500 1080p laptop with Ivy Bridge Core i7-3632QM, 8GB RAM, 1TB HDD + 16GB SSD, GeForce GT 650M, and Windows 8 is $849, free shipping from Lenovo. New low by $30. List price is $1,349.
• HP Envy dv6t-7300 Quad Edition Ivy Bridge Core i7-3630QM, GeForce GT 635M is $724.99 with $9.99 shipping from HP. New low by $19. List price is $875.
• Asus N56VJ-WH71 laptop with Ivy Bridge Quad Core i7-3630QM, 6GB RAM, GeForce GT 635M 2GB is $699.99 with $10.84 shipping from TigerDirect. List price is $850.
Kotaku thanks our coupon partners for providing these and other great deals. As always, smart gamers can find values any day of the week, so if you've run across a deal, share it with us in the comments.
Welcome to The Best of Kotaku, where Tina usually rounds up our best reporting, funniest stories, and otherwise favorite Kotaku content of the week. But Tina's on vacation! Never fear. I'm the one collecting these gems.
I dare say it was a good week. A wild one, to boot.
(The art up top is from the gorgeous, upcoming game The Banner Saga.)
Get ready to never leave your house again. For some reason, every video game maker in the world has decided to release their products in March 2013. From Tomb Raider to BioShock Infinite to SimCity, next month is stuffed with games. More »
I never wanted to have sex with Lara Croft. And I didn't want to protect her either. In the early Tomb Raider games that I played and loved, the relationship was simple. More »
In 2009, Australian developer Firemint released Real Racing for the iPhone, stunning mobile gamers with amazing visuals and setting the standard for realistic mobile racing games. More »
On December 11, 2006, Sega announced that they had snagged the rights to the much-beloved sci-fi franchise Aliens. Eager to get people excited, Sega quickly announced that they had two big games in the works: More »
It's not unusual for a newly-revealed video game to disappear for eight months. It's not weird to be amazed by a game and then neither see nor hear anything about it for a while.
The silence around Star Wars 1313, LucasArts' seemingly next-gen game that wowed onlookers at last June's E3 show, is... More »
Lab Zero Games, the guys behind 2D fighting game Skullgirls, want to add a new character to the game's roster. To do this, they're going to set up an IndieGoGo on February 25. More »
The people at Bungie are famous for putting obscure Easter Eggs into their games. Halo's creators have packed the massive sci-fi shooter franchise with all sorts of references and secrets, and fans love finding them.
But sometimes, Halo's little secrets are so obscure, nobody ever sees them. More »
The worst-kept secret in gaming is no longer "secret," as Ubisoft has revealed the cover art for the next Assassin's Creed, Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag. More »
The odds should've been against Assassin's Creed III: Liberation. It starred a woman-specifically the half-black, half-French heroine Aveline du Grandpre. More »
When I traded correspondence with writer David Brothers last week, I made the argument that video games needs its equivalent to Blazing Saddles. This time, I'm saying that it could use its own version of Milestone Media, the groundbreaking comics company started by a crew of black professionals. More »
Last week, when the folks behind Killzone went on Jimmy Fallon's late night show to talk PS4, they said something that stuck with me.
In response to Fallon's question about what the PS4's impressive memory could do for developers, Guerilla Games boss Herman Hulst answered with a great deal of... More »
I started smoking pot during my junior year of college, after a loud and messy breakup with my first girlfriend that sent me into an absolutely manic rage. More »
Now that Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance has come out and people have had time to play the game, I think it's time we had a frank discussion about how next-level insane the last boss battle is, because holy crap.
(Obviously, spoilers ahead and in the video above)
Up until this point in... More »
"Nanotechnology offers unprecedented possibilities for progress-defeating poverty, starvation, and disease, opening up outer space, and expanding human capacities. More »
The constant progression of annual sport titles has another advantage besides the games getting more and more realistic every year. It creates moments where the players go nuts-suddenly, our ordinary game turns itself into Dragon Ball Z or Super Smash TV. More »
Below, you will find six images. As eyeballs on the internet, you may not believe it at first, but these are indeed screenshots from upcoming racer Project Cars.
I've been playing the game for a week or so, with an in-construction build (the game is constantly being added to and refined by the... More »
Among the bits of information dropped during last week's PlayStation 4 announcement was this from PS4 lead architect Mark Cerny, as he discussed the system's enhanced social features:
"[With the] PlayStation 4 we are transitioning to a friends network based on real world friends. More »
Ubisoft CEO Yves Guillemot likes the PlayStation 4. Otherwise he wouldn't have showed up at Sony's big PlayStation 4 event last week, right?
He likes the PS4 in part because it's, well, a little less like a console and a little more like some of those other machines you might play games on: More »
Ever try to drink out of a fire hose? Me neither, but I'd imagine that it might feel a little bit like trying to keep up with all the news that's pouring out about the PlayStation 4.
For the sake of anyone who prefers to drink their news in a slightly more dignified manner, here's everything we've... More »
Competitive gaming has millions of fans. Its biggest stars earn six-figure salaries. Yet it's nowhere to be found on American television. You may happen upon bowling, lumberjack contests, or even rock-paper-scissors while channel surfing, but nary a match of StarCraft or League of Legends. More »
Yesterday, former Epic Games designer and Dead Space aficionado Cliff Bleszinski was quoted by GamesIndustry International about what he perceived as the worst turmoil the industry's experienced since the eighties. More »
When I played the game last year, what hit me almost instantly about The Banner Saga was the fact that, aside from being a smart turn-based strategy game, it was also one of the most beautiful video games I'd ever seen.
So it's a real treat, in the same week the game's multiplayer component became... More »
American artist Jason Felix has been working in the video game business for over 13 years now, and has had his artwork contribute to the development of series like Dead Space, Prince of Persia and even the ill-fated StarCraft Ghost.
He's also done some movie work, most recently with Blur Studios on... More »
I finally caved and picked up a new full-sized iPad this week, so it stands to reason that this Week in Gaming Apps be bigger and higher resolution than the last, with a plug that doesn't fit any other the ones that came before it. More »
When I was a young whelp, back when my writing career involved pictures of dragons and a black-and-white spiral notebook, I spent a lot of time playing the first Final Fantasy. More »
Anime and games are intimately tied together in Japan: popular games tend to get anime adaptations and popular anime tend to get game adaptations. Thus, over the years there have been a myriad of game-inspired anime-some good, others borderline unwatchable.
I saw my first game-inspired anime... More »
Late last year, we took a look at Accel World, the sister series to Sword Art Online. But not all the episodes of the series aired on TV. Rather, two extra episodes were released as part of the collector's editions of the two Accel World games: More »
I heard from many of you after this lip-curling, anti-Atlantean tract last week, in which I explained my soft bigotry of no expectations of Aquaman. Your complaints were printed out, read and thrown into my fireplace to warm my home. More »
Only the juggernaut that is Pizza Hut would have the balls to spend millions of dollars on post-Super Bowl advertising to introduce the world to its version of the tiny pizzas they sell in the Wal-Mart freezer section for a dollar apiece. More »
There are two types of people in this world, my friend: Those who start video game companies, and those who dig. Nolan Bushnell is both. A staged shot of Atari's founder in the Dubai desert launched last week's 'Shop Contest. More »
Nobody likes movies based on video games, with very few exceptions. That said, we're far from giving up on fan-made web shows based on video games. Case in point: this trailer for Machinima and Wayside Creations' Portal series, Aperture R&D.
Evidently Machinima is calling it Portal meets The Office. As long as they don't run that concept into the ground like the real The Office, we're okay with that, especially with the creators of Fallout: Nuka Break in charge. Here's the description from the Youtube info:
Based in the world of Portal 2, the idiosyncratic scientists of Aperture Research Labs are in an endless battle for the meaningless title of Lab Team of the Month.
Aperture R&D Coming To Machinima! (Portal Live-Action Series)
[Machinima]
Thanks Magnum357.
Have you heard? Game of Thrones, the fantasy book-series-turned-television-show comes back on HBO soon. At the end of this month, to be specific. Most of the episode titles are out now, though.
Courtesy of Winter Is Coming, they are:
Ep. 301 – Valar Dohaeris
Ep. 302 – Dark Wings, Dark Words
Ep. 303 – Walk of Punishment
Ep. 304 – And Now His Watch is Ended
Ep. 305 – Kissed by Fire
Ep. 306 – TBD
Ep. 307 – The Bear and the Maiden Fair
Ep. 308 – TBD
Ep. 309 – The Rains of Castamere
Ep. 310 – Mhysa
So, any guesses as to what happens when? I've not actually read the books (yet?), so it'll all be new to me—until I inevitably read your comments and find out what happens, I'm sure.
Random guesses: episode 304, someone leaves the Night's Watch? Episode 302 and 305, something to do with dragons? No idea!
Anyway, how's your week been? Good? Have any weekend plans? Feel free to talk Game of Thrones, weekend plans, or just about anything else in this open thread or over at the Talk Amongst Yourselves forum.
See you next week!
Season Three episode titles revealed![Winter Is Coming]