Wednesday, 20 November 2024
News with tag Drop  RSS

From: www.gamesradar.com

Every Lego Game You Need to Play Before You Die, Literally

Added: 09.03.2015 7:49 | 8 views | 0 comments


1. LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy



Hitting all the right notes of nostalgia, it doesn’t get any better than LEGO’s take on the original Star Wars classics. Along with finding a lasting love, playing this game deserves the top spot on your life’s bucket list. If your bucket list was full of LEGO games to play.


2. LEGO Marvel Super Heroes



Between the game’s witty humor and the large open world to explore, this LEGO game excels at delivering sheer joy. Give into your crippling completionism and finish it before you shuffle off this mortal coil.


3. LEGO City Undercover



This bold departure for the series paid off. Even without a movie tie-in, its constant creativity and fun occupations make it one of the best Wii U exclusives. Play it now and avoid a lingering deathbed regret.


4. LEGO Batman 2: DC Super Heroes



By expanding the world of Batman to 70 DC characters, including The Flash and Superman, this game becomes an essential enjoyment, well deserving of a slot above your other life goals.


5. LEGO The Lord of the Rings



Worth every penny to finally play as a LEGO Legolas. Lovers of dad jokes rejoice!


6. LEGO Harry Potter: Years 1-4



The hallowed halls of Hogwarts make a natural fit for LEGO's block-building mischief. It’s handily the greatest Harry Potter game. Why read another book before your death when you can live it in LEGO form?


7. LEGO Star Wars



The godfather of LEGO movie games still remains fun, despite its iffy source material like Attack of the Clones. Get another Star Wars fix before you cross the river Styx.


8. LEGO Indiana Jones: The Original Adventures



"I think it’s time to ask yourself: what do you believe in?" If it’s spending your life playing all the important LEGO adaptations, you’d be remiss to ignore Indy’s addictive adventures.


9. LEGO Batman: The Videogame



An infant’s laughter. The smell of fresh rain. They all pale in comparison to the digital delight of playing as the LEGO Dark Knight. Not as good as the sequel, but still a quintessential life experience when the grim reaper’s licking your heels.


10. LEGO Harry Potter: Years 5-7



Harry’s harrowing tribulations on the path to maturity mirror your own as you dig further into the Lego landscape. Will you complete your quest before Bellatrix beckons you to death’s door?


11. LEGO Rock Band



While initially greeted with skepticism, Lego Rock Band combines the heart and soul of both series. And seriously, you need to try Automatic Kick Drum at least once before you kick it.


12. LEGO Pirates of the Caribbean: The Video Game



You spent half your life watching the apparently ad-libbed adventures of Jack Sparrow. Now spend the other half of your cosmic endowment reliving his witty one-liners. Regret nothing, ever.


13. LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars



Surprisingly superior to its non-Lego cousins, this third LEGO outing in the Star Wars universe has an irresistible pull, like an Invisible Hand drawing you into its inner orbit. And yet, time marches inexorably forward.


14. LEGO The Hobbit



Everything is real. Suffering matters. Death is imminent. Meanwhile, Gandalf chats with Thorin Oakenshield at the Inn of the Prancing Pony about stealing Smaug’s jewel.


15. The LEGO Movie Video Game



You only have a few hours remaining in your life. Why not spend it with a video game based on a movie based on a video game based on a toy? Everything is awesome.


From: www.gamespot.com

Sword Coast Legends makes YOU the digital dungeon master

Added: 07.03.2015 0:09 | 28 views | 0 comments


Hear ye, hear ye! Fans of take heed: if you're looking for more cooperative role-playing to tackle with your buddies - and I'm assuming you've already put 900 hours into Divinity: Original Sin - then take a five-foot step towards Sword Coast Legends. Based off of Dungeons Dragons' 5th Edition ruleset, this game has similar stylish designs as DA:O - and the same pause-and-go combat to boot - complete with all the genre staples you've come to expect.

At GDC 2015, I had the chance to check out an extended demo of the game, complete with a party of four distinct heroes, loot and player customization, undead hordes, and plenty of witty banter. But what really got me jazzed was the game's dungeon master mode. That's right, without needing any sort of special modding know-how, you can whip up a fully customizable adventure for your friends (or strangers online). Click ahead to learn the tools of the trade.

Just like your typical Dungeons Dragons campaign, it's the job of the dungeon master to create a fun and exciting adventure for players to enjoy. Sword Coast gives you all the tools you need to make a single dungeon - or an entire campaign - with no need for extended charts and graph paper. In the demo I saw, the developers showed off some of the tools at their disposal when working with a single dungeon, including traps and ambushes.

The ambush in question involved a lone, totally-innocent-looking Drow standing on a bridge, just waiting to get beaten up for juicy loot and experience points. When the players approached the Drow, however, that triggered the ambush, which automatically spawned a whole mess of giant spiders on both sides of the bridge. The dungeon master set all this up in real time, moments before the players entered the room. He also went ahead and locked the door leading further into the dungeon, just to be a jerk.

It's interesting to note that, to the players, the dungeon master's icon appears as a soft ball of white light, which the developers described as a "magical wisp." If you happen to see the wisp flying around in the area you're currently exploring, chances are a nasty surprise is not far behind.

While dungeon masters are omniscient, their powers aren't limitless. Just as a mage requires mana, the dungeon master relies on 'threat'. You start out with a lot of it, but nearly everything the DM does requires some, from spawning enemies to setting traps. A good dungeon master will earn more threat by providing a suitable challenge for players, one that pushes them to the edge without resulting in a string of party wipes.

As a matter of fact, if a dungeon master does decide to go all "rocks fall, everyone dies" on the players, that dungeon master actually starts to lose treat. And once the threat is all gone, the dungeon master's reign of terror (and rocks) is over. The developers emphasized that designing the role of the dungeon master is a balancing act. On the one hand, they want the DM to be lethal and encourage adversarial play, but on the other they don't want the DM to just create a string of impossible challenges (which they could easily do if left unchecked).

Naturally, as the players explore and kill monsters, they are rewarded with sweet, sweet loot. And so is the dungeon master. This loot takes the form of new tricks to play on the players. In the demo I saw, the GM stumbled across a special amulet that let him summon a zombie hoard on command - which was a type of monster he didn't otherwise have access to.

As I mentioned earlier, the dungeon master's powers are not limitless. In addition to requiring threat to harass - I mean, challenge - the players, the dungeon master also cannot award specific pieces of loot to those players. That's right, no handing out free Vorpal swords to every would-be tomb raider that crosses your path. As the developers noted, the potential for game-breaking exploits is obvious.

This wouldn't be so much of an issue if games were confined to just you and your friends - because if it's just you and your buddies, then who cares, right? But Sword Coast wants players to take their DMing skills online as well, and create quests for players who don't have a DM of their own. And they don't want every dungeon to be "The Dark Caverns of Free Vorpal Swords."

Clearly, I'm excited for the DM features in . Designing encounters seemed quick, easy, and intuitive - and for an added bit of hilarity, the DM can also assume direct control of powerful boss monsters, should they feel the need to command this personally. Of course, the developers also noted that, if you wanted, you could ignore all the DM stuff and just play the entire campaign with the AI. You know, if you can't take the pressure. BAAWK BAAWK BAAAAWK!!

Excuse us, that was brash. If you're looking for more great GR+ stories, then be sure to look up .

Magical Drop 5

Added: 06.03.2015 22:26 | 8 views | 0 comments


Achievements: Complete the following tasks to unlock the corresponding achievement. To view your achievements and...

Tags: Drop, Complete
From: megagames.com


« Newer articles Older articles »
advertising

Copyright © 2008-2024 Game news at Chat Place  - all rights reserved