Where have you been all my life Final Fantasy XIII? [ March 11th, 2010 ] Posted in » Xbox 360, gaming

I love RPG’s.  They are far and away my favorite genre of games.  To me they are the closest we get to telling a true story in a video game.  That’s why I eagerly look forward to each release of the Final Fantasy series, which are quite possibly the flagship RPG titles.

Well about 5 hours into Final Fantasy XIII I can say that it hasn’t disappointed at all.  In fact, it’s jaw droppingly amazing in many of the same ways that Final Fantasy VII was.

Because Final Fantasy VII has taken on such an epic place in gaming lore, people have been in backlash to it for some time.  But they forget (or never played it when it launched) just how epic a game it was.  Final Fantasy VII changed everything about RPG’s.

Characters became important.  Personalities mattered.  Story telling took a huge leap forward.  We actually cared about those characters in ways that very few games before (or since) have captured.  I will never forget walking into my apartment in college seeing my roommates playing Final Fantasy and being blown away by the graphics.

Why do I tell you all this?  Because Final Fantasy XIII is the first game in the FF series that captures that feel.

The characters are laugh out loud funny.  They each have their own personalities, motives, and attitudes.  They aren’t just cookie cutter characters – they are characters to care about.  Even though I’ve only spent a few hours with them, I like them already.  And in the age of “whiney boy turned manly hero” that’s saying something.

Of course it’s not just characters.  The graphics are astounding.  I’m playing on the 360, so I can only imagine that the PS3 version is even more amazing.  I have never played a game where it’s hard to tell the difference between FMV’s and game play.  Maybe they are out there, but it’s not on my radar.  The only game that really captured that same seamless feeling was Half Life.  Another brilliant game.

I don’t know if Final Fantasy XIII will be as awesome 50 hours in, as it is at 5 hours.  But something tells me I won’t be disappointed.



Fallout 3 Pirated

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When I first read that headline I thought, “great just one more game some yahoo’s (yes I actually use words like ‘yahoo’) pirated for the PC.”  Much to my surprise though I realized someone pirated a copy for the 360.  After months and months of executives telling us that the reason the PC market is in decline is because of piracy we see that the same can be said of the Xbox market.

Fallout 3 for the Xbox 360The problem isn’t the system, the problem is the people.  But I’m not going to write about why piracy is no different than theft.  And why piracy is most certainly immoral.  What I’m more interested in today is the vast number of gamers who are not pirates, yet sit around saying, “I never would pirate anything, but I understand why they pirate it.”

How can you hold such a position? 

Let me ask a simple question: Do you believe software piracy is wrong?

If you do, why do you support it?

If you don’t, why don’t you actively engage in it?

I hear a lot of justifications for piracy from the “I would never pirate, but I understand…” crowd.  Yet none of them are particularly satisfying.  If Microsoft is the epitome of greed, how is being greedy ourselves going to teach them a lesson?  If EA is evil for using DRM, how is stealing their game going to solve the DRM issue?

We will never change the structure of DRM and corporate pricing if our answer is to steal.  We need a better solution.  Martin Luther King Jr taught civil disobedience, but he emphasized nonviolent methods.  He didn’t advocate breaking into “the man’s” bank and stealing “his” money.  He offered wisdom, visible protests, and boycotts.  While the issues of the computer industry can never be compared to the serious stakes in the Civil Rights movement, King knew that repaying violence with violence was not a winnable solution.

That’s why I don’t see how stealing to prevent piracy will ever improve the situation.  I don’t like DRM any more than anyone else.  But as the cliche goes, two wrongs don’t make a right.

  

October 17th, 2008 | 1 Comment

EA a Bad Company?

 

 

 

The older I get, the more interested I become in marketing.  I’m not sure there’s actually a relationship between age and interest.  Well other than the fact that I keep seeming to get older.  But that’s for another day.

 Bad Company

So when Kotaku pointed out EA’s new promotional website, I had to chuckle. 

In a company the size of EA, how does the URL badcompany.ea.com make it past the marketing department?

May 15th, 2008 | Leave a Comment

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