Spoiler Warning

SPOILER WARNING!!!!!SPOILER WARNING!!!!!SPOILER WARNING!!!!!

This blog is about the games that I am currently playing. I will discuss story, character events, and anything else that catches my interest as they happen.

This blog is not intended to be a walkthrough or to be a place for tips/tricks. These may get mentioned during my ramblings, but that is not the purpose of this blog.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Dynasty Warriors 7 - Wei To Go

Is my network back up yet? Yes the network intrusion is a very bad thing for Sony, heck, for everyone involved. But I just want my network back up. I was going to buy a game and I’ve been enjoying some online play with Red Dead Redemption. Sony promised it would be back up this week, so where is it?

But I’m still talking about Dynasty Warriors 7. It’s time to discuss the “bad guys” of the series, the kingdom of Wei. Wei is under the command of Cao Cao, the Hero of Chaos. Cao Cao’s conquest is described as bloody and violent. His ultimate goal though seems to be to unite the people and to teach them how to take care of their selves. It’s a good and worthy goal. It’s got that whole “If you give a man a fish he’ll ear for a day, but if you teach him to fish he’ll eat for a lifetime” mentality to it. I like that angle.

Wei’s story moves at a decent pace. Eventually Cao Cao suffers a major setback. He seems to lose all of his spirit. I can safely say I wasn’t interested that much. Probably because I had to keep playing as Xu Zhu and I hate that massive tub of lard. I wanted to play as Cao Ren, who I’ve always enjoyed as a character.

Xu Zhu I loathe with a passion. I’ve never like the character of the “simple fat guy who’s as strong as an ox, but has the heart of a child.” If Xu Zhu has the heart of a child then it’s because he ate it. The lame air-plowing scene with Dian Wei just made me hate the character more, especially since Dian Wei died the next mission. I actually like Dian Wei. I would say that every character in the game is superior to Xu Zhu. Unfortunately he played a major part in Wei so they can’t get rid of him, unlike poor Pang De who was only in one game.

I would say that Wei has the most colorful cast of characters in it. I’m not sure if this works in its favor but it does give it a more unique feeling. But this is also the reason Wei’s always been my least favorite of the kingdoms. I’m not sold on the eclectic mix.  Wei is also one big setup for the kingdom of Jin now, since Jin grows out of Wei.

Heck, the last group of missions that you play as Shu has you fighting Jin officers, even though you’re fighting against Wei. It’s just a sad state to see Wei in.

After Cao Cao dies Cao Pi takes over. I’ve always liked Cao Pi since his introduction in Dynasty Warriors 5, but he doesn’t do much in this game. This is another problem I have with the game.  But I’ll cover that next time when I talk about the kingdom of Jin.

Dynasty Warriors 7 - Wu To You.

Still alive, believe it or not. I know it’s been a while, again. It seems that I might be in more of a position to get back to a regular update schedule. At least once, maybe twice a day, at least for a little while. I still want to take about Dynasty Warriors 7 some more. That will take up the next 4 posts I believe. Then I’ll be back on to Red Dead Redemption. I have plenty of options on where to go from there. I might even have time to do some of the rants that I’ve been wanting to do. For now, back to Dynasty Warriors.

After I completed the kingdom of Shu I moved on to the kingdome of Wu. Wu’s always felt like the third wheel in this conflict. They’re not depicted as good or bad, they just are. They’re a kingdom that it seems likes to a good fight. The do play a large part in the conflict between Shu and Wei since whoever has Wu on their side typically comes out victorious.

Wu used to have my favorite female character in it. Sun Shang Xang. Sadly they overhauled her in Dynasty Warriors 6 and she lost that tomboy attitude that I liked. Now she’s just another dainty girl out to prove how tough she is in the world of men. Meh, not interested.

The Wu kingdom goes through three rulers during it’s storyline. First is Sun Jian. You never really get to know this guy. He seems proud of his family and then he dies. No big loss. I remember when he would hang around through the entire game. I believe that was called Dynasty Warrios 4. He was also voiced by the excellent Steven j. Blum back then.
Next is Sun Ce. I’ve always liked Sun Ce and there’s no exception here. He’s a fun guy and he seems to inspire the people around him. His death comes to quickly for me, and it comes about in a rather bizarre fashion. Apparently some back guy forces him to deal with the ghosts of his past and then drops a load of archers on him.
Finally we reach Sun Quan and I’m not sure how to pronounce his name anymore. I always that is was pronounced like it was spelled, but in this game is seems to be pronounced Twan. Lots of name corrections in Dynasty Warriors 7. Characters I’ve known for a long time suddenly have odd names.

Quan iis a twat. He comes off as backstabbing and double-dealing.He sends his sister off to marry Liu Bei of Shu, then he turns around and attacks and kills the Shu Officer Guan Yu, even though he knows this this will bring down Shu’s wrath on his country.

That’s the way this guy works. He’s constantly changing sides. But he doesn’t care. As long as he keeps his family and friends safe he’s fine with changing side on a whim. I used to enjoy Wu’s wild card status in the game. Not so much anymore. Sure Quan is fighting for his family. But Liu Bei is trying to create a lan of virtue. Cao Cao is trying to strengthen the people, to teach them to care for themselves. Sun Quan is only protecting his family. It just seems small by comparison.

Next up is Wei.

Friday, April 22, 2011

Dynasty Warriors 7 - Shu, Go Away!

So this time in Chinese history is called the Three Kingdoms. So of course there are three different powers at play. The Three Kingdoms era really begins with the fall of the Han Dynasty. As the Emperor of the Han grew weaker in power, civil unrest rose. Eventually the people rebelled in what would be called the Yellow Turban rebellion. Things would then get worse before they got better.

But I'm not here to give a history lesson, I'm here to talk about a video game that happens to use history as its premise. I'll start with the kingdom of Shu.

SHU
Shu is formed by a man named Liu Bei. He and his two sworn (note: not actual) brothers by his side try to create a land of virtue. A land of benevolence. Let me just say that by the end of the game I was sick of the work benevolence.

Shu always seems to be given the "good guy" role in these games. Liu Bei is a hero of the people and he only wants what is best for them, or so it's claimed. But as the games have progressed they've gone from "we're the good guys" to "We had good intentions. We just got lost." It doesn't help that Liu Bei is a monstrous idiot in my mind. What kind of man could possibly leave his child behind? Yet that's exactly what Liu Bei did at one point. and poor Zhao Yun had to go risk his life to rescue the poor child. I'm not sure if this kid grows up to be Liu Shan or not, but it sure would explain a lot.

Shu's good intentions go right out the window after the death of Guan Yu. Shu had an alliance with the kingdom of Wu. Wu betrayed that alliance and because of that betrayal the might Guan Yu died in battle. Stricken with grief, Liu Bei goes out on a murderous "kill all of Wu" rampage. That attack fails and Liu Bei falls ill and dies.

I was really surprised by how many people just fell ill and died in this story. I know that illness was a very serious issue back then, but more people seemed to die from disease then from combat. Shu never recovers from Liu Bei's death. Mainly because his son is an idiot and he was not fit to rule. Anyone. Ever. You only briefly get to meet Liu Shan in the Shu story. I thought that with the kingdom of Jin in the game that each kingdoms story line would go further, but the game still stops at the battle of Wu Zhang Plains. This has always been Shu's big final battle. This meant that when the story ended I had roughly half of the cast unlocked.

What the hell?! I only used half of the characters during that story? I barely got to know many of the ones that I did use. Why? Why can't I have a full story mode back for every character? Is that really to much to ask?

Next time: Wu

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Dynasty Warriors 7 - Story Of Conquest

I bet you thought I was dead. Truth is things have been very busy at work and seeing how this blog is a side project of mine it got relegated to back burner status. Can't guarantee that I'll be able to post more often, but I'll sure try.

Dynasty Warriors 7 has two modes of play, Story and Conquest. I've played a lot of Story and a little of Conquest. In past Dynasty Warriors games you've been able to select your character and get the story from that characters perspective.

Dynasty Warriors 7 changes that up. You are now given a pre-selected character and the story is told in a more chronological way. It really gives an idea of how things flowed for each kingdom, but there is this huge disconnect for the 4th kingdom of Jin.

Story mode is broken up into four kingdoms. The first three are the main forces of the Three Kingdoms era of Ancient China, Shu, Wu and Wei. The fourth kingdom, Jin, comes at the very end of the Three Kingdoms era to wrap everything up. I don't know much about Jin as I'm still in the middle of their story mode. I have studied the Three Kingdoms era a little of the years so I do have a rough idea how the story plays out.
While I liked being able to understand the order of events, you only get to play a handful of characters during the Story mode. If the character doesn't do anything until the the Jin era he's just flat out of luck as being playable. This is a big disappointment. Story mode is where I got to know and like the various characters of this world. You no longer get that full opportunity.

Plus I like unlocking characters. I always enjoyed seeing who I unlocked after I beat each character's scenario. Now extra characters are unlocked only in Conquest mode and unlocking them isn't hard or challenging. Just keep playing through Conquest you'll eventually be handed all of them.

The fact that no character truly has a set weapon is also bothersome. Koei promised no clones in this game. Problem is, you can equip anyone with any weapon, so everyone is a clone. I can't believe how  many characters use the same basic weapons. The basic sword is an insanely popular choice for characters. Sure characters get an EX attack if they have a specific weapon equipped, but beside that and a characters musou attack there's nothing to truly make them feel different. Having two weapons equipped doesn't really seem to help since I very rarely use the second weapon.

Weapons have always been a way to connect with a character. You picked Zhao Yun because you liked how he used his spear of Jian Wei. Now it doesn't matter. They both have the same basic moveset. Weapons don't help a character stand out anymore. Liu Bei and Cao Pi both use dual swords as their main, so they have the same moveset. I really hope Koei goes away from this style next game and gives each character back their own unique weapon and moveset. If doing that for the 60+ characters in this game is to hard, then cut characters. Sell them as DLC later on or something.

The oddest thing that happens during story mode is that after a stage is done, you might get voice over occurring on top of a blank screen. I kept thinking my game was broken, but every kingdom has stages like this and I just don't get it. What player would want to stare at a blank screen for so long? Before a stage you're given a slideshow of how the war is progressing. That's nice and informative, but what's with the black at the end of the stage?

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Dynasty Warriors 7 - For Great Justice!

Dynasty Warriors 7 was released for the PS3 in March of 2011. Developed by  Omega-Force, it is a Hack 'N Slash title. You play as one of the many warriors during the Three Kingdoms era of Ancient China. This is my first time playing through. I'm playing the Story Mode on Normal.

I've been playing Dynasty Warriors 7 recently, having put Red Dead Redemption on hold. I'm a big Dynasty Warriors fan, but for me the series peaked at number 5. 6 was a huge let down having tried to make things more "realistic" really took away from the over-the-top nature of the game. Plus changes to character personalities, weapon sets and exceptionally boring combat with the Renbu system did nothing to help. 7 attempts to correct that by going back to the old Charge system combat.

Dynasty Warriors has never had the deepest combat system in the world. I've always enjoyed for it's easy to "pick-up and play" nature. Plus the large cast has allowed for some diverse gameplay. Dynasty Warriors 6 decided to throw out the series good points and actually managed to dumb the series down. It introduced the Renbu system of combat. What this really meant is that you just pushed one button repeatedly as a bar built up. Once the bar maxed out you gained a "level" and your one button combo would be extended a few more hits. This was really aggravating and made the game insanely un-fun. And for big fans like me that's actually hard to do.

Dynasty Warriors 7 brings back the old Charge System for combat. Basically you press the Square button and then throw in a bigger attack with the Triangle button. This can actually make for some fun attacks/combos during combat. I'm glad it's back. But there is one major issue with it this time. Every character can now equip any weapon in the game. This means that every weapon now has the same basic attack setup instead of having unique combos for each character. It's not a turn off for me, but I would rather have each character with a dedicated weapon/moveset.

On top of that you can actually equip two weapons per character now. It's a nice though, but I hardly use the second weapon unless I'm trying to unlock skills associated with it. Then I'll use it only until I've maxed out the skill then switch back to my first weapon.

Alright, I've played a lot of the game already so my next post will be talking about the story mode.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

First Day Updates

There's a running joke with my wife whenever I bring home a new game. We place bets on whether the game will have an update. Now if this is an older game, it's pretty much expected. But when this is a new game we tend to hold our breath's waiting for that update screen to appear.

For instance, I just brought home Dynasty Warriors 7. Yes, I am a fan of the series and I'll talk about that later. Dynasty Warriors 7 just came out (March 29, same day I got it). I put it into my system and low and behold there it was. A version 1.01 update. Why? Was the game released broken? Did it need an emergency fix? Is this preparing it for DLC? If it is, why wasn't it DLC ready at ship?

From what I read it seemed to fix some CRASHES?!  What was the QA team doing? Sitting with their thumbs up their collective assess?! (note: I can't actually verify this.)

Anyways, I've found it to be an increasing problem. Part of the benefit of playing a console game is that there is no patching. If a game is broke it's going to remain broke, this means teams must be more thorough. This is obviously not the case anymore.

Heck, even the Explodemon demo I downloaded had a patch for it and it was a freakin' demo! Is it just me or are developers becoming more and more lazy? Or is it the QA team? It is their job to find these breaks before the product is shipped.

I'm finding this more and more frustrating. I just want to play my game. I don't want to update my firmware to add 3D support. I don't want to have to patch my game because you stupidly made Sentinel too strong. Stop patching and make it right the first time!

Friday, April 1, 2011

PlayStation Rewards

In an earlier post I mentioned that I was testing the PlayStation Rewards bets and that this was the reason I kept downloading demos. My goal was to reach Select status by doing PlayStation related things. Well I would like to announce that yesterday, March 31st, I finally reached Select status. My reward was a bunch of Avatars, a Dynamic Theme, and some items for PlayStation Home. Not really worth the stupid amount of effort this took to reach.

On top of that, the Rewards program has been put on temporary "hiatus", instead of being rolled out to the general public.

I can't really call the "delay" a bad thing. The rewards seem lame. The amount of effort to even reach the first level is ridiculous. Tracking your progress was not user friendly. The quest system they set up for bonus points was badly implemented.

I've got my rewards for the first level. I'll call that good.

p.s. when you use the "insert word", you should probably read that as "canceled", just to clarify.