Editorial Miscellany: Like Fine Wine

Philip Seymour Hoffman has always been the mascot for this column.

Philip Seymour Hoffman loves you.

Blerk? Has it really been a week already? Did I play any video games? Did I play LEGO Harry Potter and LEGO Lord of the Rings literally all weekend?

Yes I did. Well perhaps not literally in the literal sense of the word, but about as close as one can get while still sleeping and eating and perhaps doing laundry and bathing. Perhaps.

Therefore there are not a lot of new gaming experiences for me to talk about. Yes, Etrian Odyssey is still boss and LEGO games are still a blast, but all competent LusiDreamers know that. So I suppose I just have to – wait! I remembered something.

Shovel Knight

For some inexplicable reason, I seem to still be on press lists for local Nintendo events. I might be confused, but I am not complaining. The event was mostly just a rehash of titles I saw back in July, but there was one new title in particular that caught my eye, and once I got my hands on it, it triggered my anticipation as well.

Perhaps I should have already heard of it, but Shovel Knight is amazing. It is not just the retro visuals and style – because as we all know, that alone is not enough – but the precise, challenging, and satisfying level design combined with tight controls whet my appetite pretty thoroughly. There was not a Nintendo representative assigned to this particular game because I suppose I was supposed to be happy that it was there at all, so I did not receive any details, but from what I could surmise, “knight with shovel stars in retro side-scrolling platforming action-adventure” sums it up pretty well. Provided that I even hear about the release date, I plan to download this on the day of.

Unfortunately not given as much attention as Mario and Sonic Jerk Off At The Olympics at the media event.

Sweet game.

Speaking of Day Of

Yes, this article is posted late, but can you blame me? All of North America is tuning in to watch the mayor of my hometown – a large child named Rob Ford – show the world how to simultaneously go up in flames while managing to still run the largest city of a first world country. Seeing as I work in TV, this has been a difficult thing to ignore. I suppose the only way I can relate this whole debacle to video games is to link to a twitter conversation with a former writer for IGN. It should be noted that Canadians are very used to engaging in debates about American politics so thoroughly that it would appear we are Americans ourselves, all while accepting that Americans mention Canada about once a week, and usually in the form of a tired and ill-informed joke. So it is strange to me that Americans actually seem to have an idea of what is happening in events that hit close to home.

But at the same time, I am sick of this shit and would prefer it if everybody would just discuss interesting ideas or good art and stop being so mesmerized by train wrecks in an effort to feel better about themselves.

Nexus 5 Tomorrow

In another effort to talk about things that are – at best – only tangentially related to video games, tomorrow I am receiving my first new phone in three years. I never could have afforded an unlocked contract-free phone in the recent past, so I decided to treat myself this time. While my love for video games runs far deeper than excitement for new technology, I am definitely a sucker for the latter. I cannot say that I like mobile gaming all that much, but every so often a gem like Game Dev Story comes along and I am glad that I own something more powerful than a rotary phone. Not that I need maxed-out specs for Game Dev Story, but maybe I also run more embarrassing but more power-taxing tower defense games on my phone as well. Maybe.

But To Bash IGN

I used to be a fan of IGN, but that was a number of years ago. After sarcastic and interesting personalities like Hilary Goldstein, Erik Brudvig, Ryan Geddes, and David Clayman left, the site finally realized the potential of glossed-over shallowness it had been already striving for. Like, did the guy who reviewed this even play the game? Being personally sick of a gameplay type is not the same thing as objectively reviewing a game. I will happily read well-supported negative reviews of games I like, but people should not be paid for writing reviews like the one linked. But they are. And Rob Ford is mayor of Toronto.

Okay, bye.

4 Comments

  1. Lusipurr
    Posted 2013.11.05 at 18:32 | Permalink

    Don’t elect fat people.

  2. Ethan 'Ethos' Pipher
    Posted 2013.11.05 at 23:31 | Permalink

    Fat people are fine. It’s the childish ones who would sooner believe the entire world is against them than admit to an error that I would prefer to not elect.

  3. Andrew 'Mel' Melcon
    Posted 2013.11.06 at 01:51 | Permalink

    When I read that IGN review I thought it read pretty positively. I felt like he liked the game but wanted something different for the next time. Frankly I think numbers in reviews are detrimental to many things and I try not to really take stock in them. However, I have not played any of the Lego games so I don’t have my own opinion as to the accuracy of his claims.

    Overall I’m no fan of IGN. I’ll visit the site occasionally, but all I usually see are clickbaity list articles and headlines or banal non-info “interviews”. I’ll still look to them for reviews and weigh their opinion on a game alongside the other reviews, but that’s about it.

  4. Matt Dance
    Posted 2013.11.06 at 02:05 | Permalink

    I learned something new about Toronto today!

    I have never read IGN. Bring back The GIA!

    I have never played a mobile game beyond a few minute demo.

    I saw Shovel Knight a while ago, and it looks pretty good. Keep us posted on it!