Subject: Do I smell more torments for poor Nume? >:D (nm)
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Posted on: 2019-02-07 16:27:00 UTC
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Generalized pluggage thread by
on 2019-02-03 05:31:00 UTC
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Since we don't seem to have one, I figured we could use a thread where we just toss in cool stuff we've seen, read, been playing, and so on.
The other reason I'm posting this is that I wanted to plug Into The Breach. The basic idea of the game is that you've running a squad of mechs who can go back in time to try and stop an alien invasion. Mechanically, the enemies plan out what attacks they'll be taking, then you take a turn to try and disrupt their plan (which can include interesting things like moving enemies around so they attack each other instead of your units or buildings), then they do their thing.
There's a few other cool things, like the fact that the missions are somewhat randomly generated and that, in between runs of the game, you can bring one of your mech pilots (who can level up and therefore give their mech buffs) with you to use in your next playthrough. (And there's a bunch of different squads that have various abilities so things don't get too repetitive.) Basically, this is a game I've been having a lot of fun playing lately, and I'd recommend it. (If it helps, it's by the same people who made Faster Than Light.)
- Tomash -
I've a few items to recommend. by
on 2019-02-07 22:56:00 UTC
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First off, Artifexian. Hands down the best worldbuilding channel on YouTube. Covers everything from constructing a solar system to using plate tectonics in your fantasy world map.
Second, a pretty nifty fan project converting D&D 5th Edition into Star Wars. Currently running a game using it for my cousin and my brother, been a ton of fun so far.
And finally, SeeThroughCanoe. They post a ton of cool footage of manatees, dolphins, rays, alligators, and other such wildlife from the eponymous canoe. It's great. -
The Best Youtube Channel and some other things by
on 2019-02-05 15:56:00 UTC
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I'm just gonna say it: I think Door Monster might just be the Very Best Thing on Youtube right now. They're fantastically, amazingly funny, and you should go watch them right now.
In other news, John Romero's SIGIL is due for release this month, so people who own a copy of Doom... well, you can get on that.
And if you don't own a copy of Doom you can pick up every pre-Doom 3 Doom game for <$5 on Steam right now. So... get on that. It's Doom. Utter classic, and a total blast to play through.
I've been reading Fabien Sanglard's utterly fantastic Wolfenstein 3D Black Book, but that's unlikely to be of interest to the non-programmers in the audience, so I won't go into detail. Suffice to say, XMS and VGA are two of the most disgusting things I've ever seen. :-(
And yeah, a Steam sale is on. So that's also a thing. What else... Uhh... yeah, I've been writing a lot? But nothing to plug out of that yet. -
I have learned that "Snape teaches sex-ed" is a thing. by
on 2019-02-04 16:13:00 UTC
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So here's one good and one bad.
The good: This prompt response by Luna LoveWell. Pitch-perfect and hilarious.
The bad: "The Creation of Life" by Mazeline Gerard. A horrifying Severus Snape/Luna Lovegood shipfic that definitely knows what it is doing is wrong and does it anyway. You may commence screaming internally forever.
~Neshomeh -
So, I'm claiming "The Creation of Life." by
on 2019-02-07 15:52:00 UTC
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Sometimes a story idea happens to you and there's nothing you can do but roll with it. And the title kind of fits, too. ^_^
~Neshomeh might even get it done this year, we'll see. -
Do I smell more torments for poor Nume? >:D (nm) by
on 2019-02-07 16:27:00 UTC
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Sorry, not this time. {= ) by
on 2019-02-07 18:39:00 UTC
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Can't exactly swing it as a misplaced crossover, and while I'd love to see Agent Decima cringe at it, she only does slash, and femmeslash at that, IIRC.
I CAN swing it as a wrongfully assumed Suefic, though. ^_^
~Neshomeh - Here's another good sex-ed fic by on 2019-02-04 18:23:00 UTC Reply
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How did I know that was the one?! by
on 2019-02-04 21:24:00 UTC
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This is a personal favourite of mine and I wholeheartedly second the recommendation.
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The good fic was hillarious! Thanks for the link by
on 2019-02-04 18:14:00 UTC
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(I have not yet opened the bad one)
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My most favoritest Newgrounds game by
on 2019-02-03 23:53:00 UTC
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Hey everyone! Does anyone around here like Pokemon? How about Terraria? Or possibly Metroid, as some have compared this game to?
Well, this game isn't enough like any of those to be a ripoff, so you'll likely enjoy Monster Sanctuary, a low-fantasy monster-training platformer! You play as the descendant of one of four families, descended from the first four Monster Keepers, who saw that monsters could be trained to be the ally of humanity and not its enemies. Hatch a team of monsters, fight wild monsters to make yours stronger, learn about a unique combat and leveling system, and figure out what's behind the unusual overpresence of boss monsters in the Sanctuary...
Or at least you will in the full game. This is just a demo, with the full version still being in development, but it still has a significant amount of content, and I can confess that I have been coming back for more even after the end of the demo's plot. Plus also I'd love to get this game more support in any way I can.
Play Monster Sanctuary on Newgrounds here: https://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/719932
-Twistey
P.S. Ask me and I can help you if you're stuck for any reason other than a technological one. There's only one place in the game that I don't know how to get to. -
I have a couple by
on 2019-02-03 20:47:00 UTC
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1) Heretic. It's fantasy Doom. You can get it on Steam.
2) The Star War Gatherings, which are the Star Wars movies taken through several layers of Google Translate. It's one of the funniest things I've ever seen. More information here:
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WebOriginal/TheStarWarGatherings -
Aaah, Heretic... by
on 2019-02-04 00:45:00 UTC
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Heretic is... not my favorite Doom Engine game. It really is pretty much a Doom fantasy TC, and there's nothing wrong with that, but I don't think the design stands up to the original, level-wise. It's just not quite as fun. Pick up the original Doom first, IMHO.
So, for posterity, here is Thoth's Definitive Commercial Doom Engine Game Review:
-(The Ultimate) Doom: The game that started it all. Doom holds up amazingly well to this day... once you rebind the controls so that WASD works and lookspring is disabled. But other than that... man, this game is good. It looks good, it plays good, it just feels good. And so much of the level design is just rock solid. Especially anything John Romero touched. That man is a master. (and he's putting a new levelpack out for the game soon, by the way).
-Doom 2: Doom 2 introduced a lot of new stuff. Chaingunners, Pain Elementals, Hell Knights, Mancubi, Revanents, Arachnotrons, and, of course, the amazing Super Shotgun. But sadly, I feel the design declined. Some of these levels are just exercises in frustration, and only a few of the 30 are really that memorable. The Icon of Sin is an exercise in frustration to beat, too. as in, I've never won it. However, the maps are still mostly solid and the game is pretty fun. Most of all, this is the game that most of the fantastic Doom mapping community uses as the base for their levels. That alone makes it worth a buy, even if the game was awful (it isn't).
-Heretic: Okay, calling it "just medival Doom" is unfair. Heretic also added an inventory system, its weapons were slightly different, it had new enemies... the problem, again, comes from the overall design. Raven always felt like id's B-team, and the levels are just a little less clever, the spritework just a bit less evocative, the game just... a bit less *fun*. It's still good, but less so.
-Hexen: Heretic was still more of that good-old Doom style shooting, albeit with a few new tricks in there. But nobody can say that Hexen is more of the same. You got to pick one of three classes, and you could jump, right off the bat. Polyobjects (level elements that move horizontally) and an actual scripting language as well as numerous other under-the-hood enhancements to circumvent the Doom Engine's limitations and add new functionality mean that Hexen doesn't look or play like any Doom Engine game before it. The world is more dynamic, and for once we're not just going level-to-level: there are hubworlds, and you may need to go back and forth between levels, or even go back into the same level from another starting point, slowly unlocking more and more levels. The item system has been expanded as well, allowing you to carry around key objects and do some more puzzling, and those puzzles, as well as combat that feels slower and more brutal, really set Hexen apart. Annnd... I really don't like Hexen much. Don't ask me why. I just don't. It's alright, but... no.
-Strife: Now Strife, while less technically advanced, is a much better game than Hexen in my opinion. It actually has a story, a dialogue system, not everything's trying to kill you, you can still jump... did I mention there are upgrades? And sidequests? And a (slightly) branching story? And a kinda-sorta stealth system? This game is great. Also, if you buy Strife (you want "Strife: Veteran Edition" not any of the unrelated games called Strife) on Steam, it doesn't play in dosbox, but actually in a modernized source port, and it actually includes a ton of content left on the cutting room floor (including a full multiplayer mode!) in it. If you have to buy one doom engine game that isn't doom... buy this one.
As for how to play these games... I don't endorse playing through DosBox like Steam does by default for most of them. Strife comes with a pretty killer source port, but for the rest of these, I suggest grabbing a sourceport from the internet, as they run better, are better supported, and tend to have more features than the original exes. GZDoom is the default suggestion nowadays: it's compatible with any doom mappack or mod you care to download (including the (in)famous Brutal Doom), runs all of the games mentioned above, and will automatically find game datafiles when you get them from Steam, so you don't have to do anything extra. For the true purists out there, Chocolate Doom (as well as Chocolate Heretic, Chocolate Hexen, and Chocolate Strife) plays these games the way they originally looked on DOS, but without all the bugs and glitches and nonsense. So yeah. -
I use gzdoom by
on 2019-02-04 01:42:00 UTC
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I haven't played Hexen yet, but I look forward to it.
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Like I said, it's... weird. by
on 2019-02-04 18:49:00 UTC
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But it's definitely worth trying at least.