Sunday, 10 March 2019

Jurassic Park: The Game


The next game on the hit list is another American only game and one of the early TellTale games and I have to say, they’ve made vast improvements since this outing.

It’s a story-based game where you follow Gerry, Jess, Nima and some dickhead marines around Jurassic Park in the aftermath of the first film. The marine come to rescue the likes of Jess and Gerry but this soon turns in to a quest for survival and trying to make money out of dino embryos.

In terms of the characters, Tell Tale haven’t changed much in terms of their design. All of the characters move between being endearing and irritating at a whim and their moral compasses appear to be attached to ridiculously strong magnets. In addition to this, the dialogue options don’t seem to tie up with what they actually say. A lot of the time, it appears to be inconsequential what option you pick because they will say whatever they want.

In terms of the gameplay, it’s basically an 8 hour long quick time event. These are the only real interactions you have other than clicking on objects in the environment to generate further bits of meaningless dialogue. There are also a few puzzle bits but not a lot, so I would it’s limited in terms of gameplay.

The quick time events are ridiculously unforgiving too. You have to know what’s coming before it comes to get through most of them. The button prompts change speed and flick all over the place. Thankfully though there are loads of checkpoints throughout these segments.

In terms of looks, it’s now very dated and the frame rates are poor when loading into a scene for the first time. It feels a little bit like it’s been glued together and quite badly. Sound wise, it’s typically good as it’s stuck to the original soundtrack for the movie and therefore, sounds epic.

Achievements – 1,000 Points – 50 Achievements

Playing through the game without worrying about the achievements will net half of them. The other half mainly require completing all of the quick time events in one go without making any mistakes. As mentioned earlier there are checkpoints during the scenes but this also becomes a problem later on.

There are a few scenes where the checkpoints occur directly after a point that’s easy to fail. This happened to me during one of the last scenes in the final chapter of the game. The problem with this was that once you activate the checkpoint, you then need to replay the scene without any checkpoints at all or start the episode again from the beginning. However, this particular section was even more problematic.

There is an achievement for using three flares to look down some corridors after this scene. You get the flares by picking them up during the QTR action sequence, however the action I missed was for picking up one of the flares. Even replaying and completing the scene didn’t work as when I came to use the flares in the next section, I only had two of them as replaying the scene does not overwrite your last save. This meant restarting the episode again and making sure that I didn’t miss the flares during the cut scene.

Aside from this, another one that often goes missing is for completing the first episode without dying. I didn’t take any chances with this and made sure I immediately reloaded whenever I made a mistake on the first playthrough to ensure I got it.

At the end of the game, there is a multiple-choice achievement where the story line splits. This appears to be Tell Tale’s first foray into multiple endings, and this is the only decision that impacts the storyline as far as I’m aware. It’s not very far after a reloadable checkpoint though so it’s not too painful to replay.

Downloadable Content – N/A

Jurassic Park: The Game was an interesting journey into the earlier TellTale franchise, if not a bit messy and rough in places. It’s a solid and enjoyable story experience but the over-the-top quick time events get old fast. It takes anywhere between 8 to 10 hours to complete so is fairly decent value for money.

Oxenfree


So the 2019 completion train continues with Oxenfree. The 2018 Ultimate Head to Head Contest brought me within 1 achievement of completing this game but the last achievement required a third complete playthrough so it got put off. That is until February of this year when Oxenfree became True Achievements’ playlist game and that gave me the push I needed to finish it off.

Oxenfree follows the story of Alex, a girl with green hair, who goes to an island with her friends to have a party on a beach. One thing leads to another and they end up exploring a cave and causing lots of weird goings on. I won’t say much about the story because it’s quite good and original. It’s really well constructed. As mentioned above you need three playthroughs to get all the achievements and on the subsequent playthroughs, the characters become subtly aware of the fact they’ve done this all before. In addition to this, there are various moments where you can see other player’s decisions later in the game. On the first playthrough this was incredibly eerie.

Gameplay wise, you need to make your way through a series of set pieces that involve dialogue decisions where you can either be nice, mean or silent. Getting from set piece to set piece involves a lot of walking and I mean a lot of walking. The worst thing about the game is how slow Alex walks. She’s clearly in no rush to go anywhere even when her friends are in peril. Another element of the gameplay is the radio that Alex uses to deal with the supernatural elements of the story. You need to tune it to the correct radio frequency but there are a lot of frequencies to go through and if you move too fast you will miss the correct frequency without realising. This just adds an unnecessary additional timeframe to the game and removes any kind of pace you may have thought was building.

Outside of the this, the artwork of the game has been widely praised but to be honest, it’s very bland and the accompanying strangeness made it very hard to look at, especially when it made you think there was problem with your television. Musically, they’ve tried to create an air of creepy atmosphere, which again is okay for the first playthrough. But by the next two, the music appears very disjointed and grates a little bit.

In addition to the above, I managed to run into a glitch where the game wouldn’t let me progress because… I’m not sure why. It could be because I interrupted a piece of dialogue or it could be because I didn’t take the exact path the game wanted me to take. Either way, this was a mild irritation right at the end of my last playthrough and I could have lived without it.

Achievements – 1,000 Points – 13 Achievements

13 achievements, 3 playthroughs and only 1 achievement guaranteed from whatever you do. Initially on the first playthrough it’s advisable to just play the way you want and focus on getting the collectibles. There are two types of collectibles; Adler letters, which you can just pick up, and anomalies which you need to activate using your radio. This really drags out the first playthrough making it the longest – unless you leave the collectibles until later.

While doing all of this, I concentrated on being nice to everyone. When I started the game, it was because I had to get the Matchmaker achievement in the UHH contest which involves getting the characters of Ren and Nona to date and you need to nice to both of them to encourage the relationship. At the same you time, you can be continually nice to Jonas, who is your step brother and accompanies you for most of the game. This will get you the new beginnings achievement for befriending him.

If everything goes according to plan, there will be four achievements left and another three can be earned simply by playing the game again and saying nothing – expect for the last bit where it can’t progress without you making a dialogue decision. All other dialogue choices fade out if you don’t pick them.

Then there is just the third playthrough for getting everyone to hate you. While I don’t enjoy playing out of character, this did produce some laugh out loud moments when Alex is really mean out of nowhere and the other characters start hating on her. A lot of people have complained about this achievement in that it hasn’t unlocked for them but it was pretty easy to see all the opportunities to be nasty. There are a few bits of the game you may have to intentionally do badly though but this is still unconfirmed.

Downloadable Content – N/A

Oxenfree was fun in places despite being slow-paced most of the time. Having to play it three times for the completion was a bit much for me and the differences were really minor and didn’t change much of the game play experience. I’m glad to have played the game but I’m also happy that I’ll never have to play as Alex again.

Friday, 1 March 2019

Tower of Guns


The next one is a sort of double header and also comes with the end of an achievement hunting thing for me known as ‘The Stack.’ Stacking is where you can have two versions of the same game with the same set of achievements so can earn them multiple times. I’ve done this before with Tell Tale games when they have gone free with Games with Gold but some people take this to the next level. You can have up five different versions of Batman: Arkham Asylum, which is a good game, but not complete-it-5-times good. The most notorious game for this is Minecraft which can be stacked a horrendous 11 times, including on Nintendo Switch.

Anyway, my point was for some obscure reason, Tower of Guns has a special edition which is available in Europe and for some bizarre reason I bought it and earned all the achievements twice. I have no idea why as I hadn’t played Tower of Guns to know if it was good enough to warrant two playthroughs. It’s not and I’ll be saving future stacks for games that deserve them. Like the Ezio Collection or L.A. Noire perhaps?

Tower of Guns is a very simple game. You are given a gun and a tower and you go from floor to floor shooting stuff to progress. The more you play, the more stuff you unlock such as different guns and different perks to change the way the game plays. For example, I found the game nearly unplayable without the TooYoungToDie perk on. Probably because I’m so shit at the game that the enemies loved seeing me enter a room so they could get some decent target practice in.

You fight your way through a series of rooms and then face a giant boss. Once the boss is dead, you move on to the next level. There are five levels that need to be cleared and once you have done this, you have completed the game. You are assessed on your overall performance across all runs so if you die 49 times and win once, you are given a win ratio of 2%.

Aside from Normal Mode, there is an Endless Mode which puts you back at the start so you can go around again… against harder enemies.

Looks wise, I found it to be too close to Borderlands to like and once you’ve done ten runs, the music will start to drive you mad. There are these things called Hugbots that if you don’t kill them, you get taken to this special place to get special rewards (the rewards were always shit and ineffective when I went there) and the music gets worse, like they are singing at you. No one wants that and no one asked for it.

Another issue I had a few times was when I started getting not-totally-shit at the game, some of the levels filled up with so many enemies that the game couldn’t cope and the frame rate fell off the edge of a cliff.

Achievements – 1,000 Points – 12 Achievements

It’s a small haul that took me 7 hours the first time and less than 6 on the second playthrough so it’s not bad but the gameplay will make you want to power through and get it done as quickly as possible which is why my second time was quicker despite RNG not doing me any favours. That sums up completing 80% of the list - Random Number Generators.

Anyway, starting out will knock two out straight away. You get an achievement for killing a boss, so completing one level, and an achievement for unlocking your first gun. These ones are just handed to you for taking part.

The next ones are sort of miscellaneous and there are four of these. Showing how badly designed the game is in places (and confessing this in loading screens does not make it acceptable) there is a ‘TILT’ function which allows you to respawn at the start of the floor. Doing this 10 times in a row for no reason, however, is an achievement. There are also achievements for staying airborne for 45 seconds (easy when you find a level with an air elevator that pushes you up) and the true random ones for killing 350 enemies in one level and dying while a boss is exploding. The former is random because I encountered very few levels with 350 plus enemies in them even if you hang around, and the latter because it requires you to get shot after you’ve killed a boss. I had to force the issue with this in the first game and commit suicide as the boss was exploding to get it to unlock.

The next two are for actually finishing the game which highlights that there is something called an Uberwin where you fight something called the Maw but I never did this because you don’t need to. You also get another achievement for completing ten runs, win or die. I’m trying to lay these out in order as the next ones are the actual work…

There are two achievements for unlocking all the guns and all the perks. Both of these follow the same trends of having to complete various things in the game to unlock them. Getting 5 health pick ups in one life was a pain despite the fact it gives you two for free on each run. Finding five secrets was also painful as the level design hides things really well and only allows you to get some of them if you have specific jump power ups – so more RNG.

The biggest RNG issue I had though, was on my second run. You need to destroy 24 ‘tanks’ to unlock one of the guns and in the Special Edition, these seem to come at a premium.  I did loads more proper runs to try and get tanks, but none would spawn until levels 8 onwards in Endless Mode and sometimes not even then. Typically, when I only needed one more, 5 spawned at once and at that point, I felt like the game was just taking the piss.

After this is all done – which took me between 20 and 25 runs on both games – you simply have to get a gun that fires explosive rounds, point it at your feet, and fire until you are dead. Rinse and repeat and before you know it, you will have completed 50 and 100 runs and unlocked the last two achievements.

Downloadable Content – N/A

According to True Achievements’ genre team, this is my first foray into the Roguelite genre of games and I can’t say it’s made me want to play more of them. I do have a couple in my collection – Spelunky and Paranautical Activity but they are so hard they will likely never appear on this blog… or will they? No. They won’t.