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Tuesday Gaming Diary: Mom, when was the last time you played a game for fun?

August 30, 2016 By Keri Honea Leave a Comment

video-games1“Mom, when was the last time you played a game for fun?”

My eldest asked me this just last week as I was playing Hue for a PlayStation Lifestyle review. I was getting overly frustrated with the game, because it’s a platformer and I suck at them. After the thousandth time I yelled “UGH!” after dying, the eldest asked, “Do you like what you’re playing?”

I said it was okay, but not my bag. He then asked why I was playing it. I explained it was for a review for work. He cocked his head to the side and then asked the question above. So innocently. And dammit if he wasn’t right. I’ve wanted to play Uncharted 4 for the longest time now and yet never found the time because of a review. Not to mention The Division, which I still want to finish. Not to mention Star Ocean, or Deus Ex Mankind Divided or LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens.

Are these all games I’m supposed to review for strategy guides? Absolutely! But you see, I very rarely review a strategy guide for a game that I don’t want to play. It’s one of the perks of starting this site seven years ago. (Whoa, has it been seven? Crazy!)

Well, my son is right, and I’m done. Of course I’ll still review games, because I like to be paid, but I’m definitely backing off. Things are different now. I’m not running a somewhat major website where so much depends on me. I’m with two awesome teams, and it’s okay if I don’t review every massive AAA game under the sun. It’s okay to play a game for me, and it’s time I do so. I’ve been lucky that the games lately I’ve been reviewing are pretty good, even Hue with its controller-throwing urges. But Uncharted 4 and several others await.

May all of you play games for fun!

Filed Under: Columns, Gaming Diary

Why Should I Buy? – Deus Ex: Mankind Divided Collector’s Edition Strategy Guide

August 26, 2016 By Keri Honea Leave a Comment

Just the day after I received my Deus Ex: Mankind Divided Collector’s Edition, the accompanying strategy guide arrived. Now that it’s here, why buy the Deus Ex: Mankind Divided Collector’s Edition strategy guide over the paperback? As you can tell from just the images and the cover of the video below, the hardcover is quite nice. So there is that for starters. But what else does it have?

There is a tangible item and the book itself has some extras over the paperback edition. Watch below and see what you get and decide for yourself if it’s enough to warrant the extra money.

The lovely Brad is handling this strategy guide review, of which we hope to have soon.

Filed Under: Collectors Editions, Unboxing Strategy Guides

Unboxing the Deus Ex: Mankind Divided Collector’s Edition

August 24, 2016 By Keri Honea Leave a Comment

Deus Ex: Mankind Divided released yesterday, and it indeed had a Collector’s Edition. Of course I preordered it immediately, as my CE throne can always be bigger and more grand. Once again, I don’t remember what all came with it, but I was pleased with everything within. The full unboxing video is below!

The Deus Ex: Mankind Divided Collector’s Edition contains all of the digital goodies advertised with the failed and awful “Augment Your Preorder” program that Square Enix attempted to implement when preorders for the game first opened. It also contains a code for a digital download for a composer’s sample of the game’s soundtrack. Most likely, me being me, I’ll fall in love with the composer’s sample and then buy the full soundtrack.

What really stands out with this CE, other than the two pieces of mystery I still haven’t researched, are the steelbook case and statue. The artwork on the steelbook case is some of the best I’ve ever seen. And while the stand to the Adam Jensen statue feels rather cheap, the statue itself is nicely painted and rather well made. I think my money was well spent.

Now I just have to play the game and see if that makes it worth it. I have a feeling I will love it.

Filed Under: Collectors Editions, Extended Lore, This Has Nothing to Do with Strategy Guides!, Video Game Collector's Editions

Book Review: New York Collapse

August 23, 2016 By Keri Honea Leave a Comment

New York Collapse review

New York Collapse is a companion novel to Tom Clancy’s The Division, and like most things I own, I’ve had it quite awhile. I don’t know why I didn’t read it sooner, but now that I’ve read it, I wish I had waited even longer to do so. New York Collapse itself is a survival guide book for what to do in case the largest city in America, New York City, collapses due to a catastrophic disaster. The book claims to be written by a Warren Merchant, but this is a pen name for a government administrator who seems to have way too much knowledge and insight to the future regarding the city collapsing due to a flu outbreak. While that’s interesting to read in of itself, the main draw to the book are the handwritten notes from April Kelleher, an inhabitant of New York during the Dollar Flu crisis. Her husband bought her the book as a joke, but as the disease spread rampantly across the city, she started to notice two things: 1) how useful the advice was and 2) how eerily accurate the book was with its predictions. The book becomes her journal, as she writes down her experiences, what happened to her husband, what she witnesses, etc., and it becomes her notes in trying to find the truth about both the Dollar Flu and Warren Merchant. Since Warren’s writing is rather cut and dry and therefore, boring, it’s April’s handwritten notes that make it worth reading at all. In fact, she opens up a completely different and even darker side to The Division than I thought was possible. Unfortunately, it’s riddled with spoilers, which is why I wish I had held off on reading it until after I finished the game.

No I haven’t finished the game yet. Yes, I suck. Let’s move on.

The player never sees April Kelleher in the game, but they do find her notes scattered all over Manhattan. This book pieces those notes together and fills in the big picture of what happened to her. As the player, if you hunt down the Echoes littered throughout the city, you will find one that shows the murder of her husband. At the time, you don’t know who he is, other than the fact he seems to be important regarding the Dollar Flu, but when you reach April’s notes about witnessing his murder, it all falls together. And that’s how most of the book goes. You’ll come across something in the game that has meaning, but April’s journal makes it ten times more meaningful.

However, as a result, her journal is full of spoilers. Part of the player’s mission in The Division, other than keeping order, is to find out what happened to the first wave of Division officers. If you haven’t gotten that far in the game (thankfully I have), then this is all spoiled for you in her journal. It’s not as detailed as the game is, as April is not a Division officer, but a civilian trying to survive, but it still takes some of the wind out of the big reveal sails.

If you’re looking for more background regarding The Division and you’ve finished the game, then definitely add this to your bookshelf. It’s a great read that won’t take very long to peruse. It’s also filled with removable artifacts that really hammers home how haunting the world of The Division really is. Just don’t open it until you finish the game. I’m going to reread it after I finish, that’s for sure.

Filed Under: Books, Extended Lore

Monday Gaming Diary: New Witcher 3 Strategy Guide

August 22, 2016 By Keri Honea 2 Comments

The Witcher 3 Wild Hunt Complete Edition Collector's Strategy GuideI’ve known that Prima Games was going to publish a new strategy guide for The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt that would include the two expansion packs for awhile now. That said, it didn’t hit me that I could add a second Witcher 3 strategy guide to my bookshelf until I received the official newsletter from the publisher last week. Then it dawned on me; wait, I could finally have that motivation to play AND finish The Witcher 3, ja?

Of course I said the same thing about the Skyrim Legendary Edition of the strategy guide. Whoa, here’s an even FATTER book with everything Skyrim has to offer! Surely now I’ll get through the game, right?

Well, I got further, I can say that. And then I remembered why I stopped playing the first time around. The game is just not for me. Too little story and too many distractions. I need an even balance. Well, okay, that’s not true; I need a story as good as the quantity of distractions. If I wanted to run around with no true goal, I’d play No Man’s Sky or Elite: Dangerous. Yeah, I went there.

Technically, The Witcher 3 should be a completely different tale in game completion. The story of Witcher 2 was incredibly deep, and I’ve heard it’s much the same with the third iteration. With this, I’m not really sure what’s stopping me. Is it fear? Is it the thought of being completely overwhelmed? Is it a lack of time? Is it my review schedule? Is it me making a lot of excuses? Eh, probably all of the above.

If I do decide to tackle this next strategy guide, aptly named The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt Complete Edition Collector’s Guide, then I will have to fully commit. No more slacking. No more putting off reviews. Once I sit down with The Witcher 3, there is no getting up. There is no stopping for something else. There is no looking for what else is shiny and new. I will play it until I finish it or die trying.

I may have just talked myself out of playing this game once again. I’m the worst.

Filed Under: Columns, Gaming Diary

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