A thread for the discussion of games: board, LARP, MMORPG, video, tabletop RPG, game theory etc. etc. and all attendant news, developments and ancillary subjects thereof, as well as coordinating/scheduling games either online or IRL. All are welcome to chime in, talk about their favorite games or learn about gaming of any sort.
PLEASE TO WHITEFONT SPOILERS for video games, RPG modules or anything for which foreknowledge of events might lessen one's enjoyment of whatever gaming experience.
I've been playing Left 4 Dead. Thankfully, no eyestrain has occurred.
I've taken it for a spin with just Bot teammates. Their AI is good but they're actually a little too competent and can diffuse certain situations (like being pinned by a zombie) so quickly that you barely take any damage.
Playing with actual people will be much more chaotic - which'll be a plus to the tone of the game - but this game really needs to be played with people who are actually friends rather than the general cattle of Live who often lack social skills. I can imagine griefing of an inexperienced player to be an even more souring game experience than normal.
So, those of you that want to take on the zombie apocalypse, you know where to find me...
Hey Raq, and anyone else who's played Battlestar Galactica, another question: as I understand it, when you have four or six players, you can get a Cylon sympathiser in addition to the actual Cylons. I've heard it suggested that (assuming they're pro-Cylon), they're not that interesting to play, that they don't even have all the options that revealed Cylons have. Is this correct? (If so, it seems to me that it would be a little dull winding up with this card.)
So, who's played
Braid
? Because it's pretty awesome.
Yes, with 4 or 6 players you put a Cylon sympathizer card in the loyalty deck at the midpoint. If Baltar or Boomer are in the game, they have a higher chance of being the sympathizer than the other characters.
I think this is more a nod to the source material than any benefit to game play; the player who gets this card has to reveal it immediately and then gets sent to the brig immediately.
I haven't seen anyone use the sympathizer effectively for anything. Basically it's just a turn in the brig and limited actions thereafter. It can't happen until the midpoint of the game, so there's that.
One of the things about the game is that, until/unless you are a revealed cylon, you are always busy. Even if it's not your turn, you have to respond to the crises generated on others' turns, and other players may use their turns to direct your action (think Adama ordering Starbuck to go shoot down raiders). And there's always a lot of analysis and discussion about whether there is a cylon (in the first half; after the midpoint you know there is) and if so, who? The sympathizer can still do all these things, to some extent.
I think the best play is the 6-player game, where you have two cylons, if one reveals and one doesn't. And of course, one of the cylons could be the sympathizer.
I haven't seen anyone use the sympathizer effectively for anything. Basically it's just a turn in the brig and limited actions thereafter. It can't happen until the midpoint of the game, so there's that.
I hear there's an 'official' variant where there's no sympathiser and the humans simply start our with lower resources to balance it out. At the moment I'm inclined to try it out that way - especially for a first play, I don't want anyone to feel stuck with a second-best option.
So I was checking out my (58 year old) cousin's profile on FaceBook. She listed under interests "RPG video games". So I clicked it.
Imagine my amusement that omnis was the first person listed.
I won at Munchkin! Twice!
Polter-Cow, me. It's so simple and gloriously designed it's, well, glorious.
I spent all night playing it. There was a lot of "This is IMPOSSIBLE!!!" followed by "My my, that was a clever puzzle."
Imagine my amusement that omnis was the first person listed.
Huh what? I'm listed where? Do I know your cousin? So confused.