Recent Games

Been playing a whole crop of new (to me) games lately, thought I'd summarize a few of them. Advance Wars: Days of Ruin (Nintendo DS) Yeah, it's another DS game that could go on any console. The second screen makes some things more convenient, but it's not critical. They've even dropped the weird "two battles at once" mode from the previous AW title. Advance Wars has always represented great turn-based strategy and this installment is more of the goodness. There are several significant changes and I suspect it has made the game overly favor the defender, but I haven't played enough multiplayer to be sure. The AI has always been pretty bad, and that is still true. I haven't completely finished the campaign, but I'm only a few missions short (I think) and the last few missions weren't fun so I think I'm done. But there are something like 40 "Trial Maps" which are fun. This is the first version of Advance Wars to support internet play, and that seems fairly solid. It is worth nothing that it doesn't support saving an online game, so I'd give the edge to Field Commander on the PSP in that regard. It does support internet voice chat but it's terrible. Tony and I have been disabling the built-in chat and using Xbox 360 for chat, which is superior technology. Basically, if you enjoyed a previous Advance Wars then you'll enjoy Days of Ruin. Pixeljunk Monsters (PS3) This is a "tower defense game". I'm not sure this is a real genre, I'm only aware of two other games in the "genre" - Desktop Tower Defense (Flash) and Hordes of Orcs for OS X. Hordes is in mind a very inferior ripoff of DTD. Pixeljunk Monsters doesn't play much like the other two. On the one hand, yes you're building towers to attack oncoming monsters, and different types of monsters are vulnerable to different towers. On the other hand in PM you have an avatar that runs around the screen and you have to collect the coins, as well as the power-up gems (which aren't present in DTD). You also have the ability to level a tower by standing on it for a while. Lastly in PM you can only build towers on trees. Different levels have different tree arrangements and more complex monster movement patterns which makes each level a different and unique challenge. I like PM a lot. If you have a PS3 it's worth the $8 or so it costs (it's a downloadable store title) Mass Effect (Xbox 360) This is where Bwana will try to make a joke as I start covering November titles. I believe that Gamefly doesn't buy enough of the big Christmas season titles, because this happens every year. They start sending me B PSP titles from about 7 places down my queue and then after Christmas they slowly ship all my backlogged high-profile holiday titles. Mass Effect falls into this category. Historically I've liked Bioware's PC games and disliked their console games. Even Knights of the Old Republic I thought was a crummy console game with clunky mechanics and a PC interface shoehorned onto a console controller. I'm definitely in the minority here, but I didn't care for KOTOR. Mass Effect is finally fun in combat. They still have technical issues - the game drops frames like crazy and the "AI" of your squad mates deserves the quotes I give it. But if you can get past those the story is interesting, and it's not as pause-happy as KOTOR was. Now, I'll warn you it does talk your ear off at the beginning. I finished the very first tutorial story in a touch less than an hour. Then I got to the Citadel, and it was just "As you know Bob, it's been over a hundred years since blah, blah, blah," for quite a while. I got up to about four hours of gameplay before I saw another combat. If you think you can survive the RPG world-building datadump at the start it's a solid game. Commanders: Attack of the Genos (Xbox 360) Last week's Live Arcade title came out of nowhere as far as I was concerned. It's more turn-based strategy! I find the retro art-deco looks (tanks with fins!) amusing, and the game seems pretty playable. Haven't tried it online yet, but I like the singleplayer game. Uncharted: Drake's Fortune (PS3) Woosh. I really wanted to like Uncharted. Truthfully this is a game that had I bought it I'd still be playing. But since I rented it I'm just sending it back. I had been looking forward to Uncharted, but when I played the demo I felt that A ) the melee system was stiff and awkward, B ) the attackers took entirely too much bullets to drop, C ) there weren't nearly enough bullets provided, and D ) the cover was both very "sticky" and just didn't work well. Having played the full game now I still think all of those things. The demo is Chapter Four of the game and I didn't see that very much had changed. I feel like the designers of the game decided it was too short so they compensated by making the combat encounters too difficult (they call that "adding replay value"). The platforming is a lot of fun, but I got tired of restarting combats multiple times until I learned where everybody was going to spawn from. Patapon (PSP - demo) I mentioned the crazy download process a few posts back but I checked out the game yesterday. It's cute, and it certainly has some interesting ideas. But at the end of it I sort of went "Meh." It seemed like too much work to try to figure out which command was needed when, plus the repetition of drumming the "march forward" command over and over just seemed plodding. I could be convinced the final game is worth playing, but the demo didn't raise my interest level at all.
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Congressman Reyes' Letter

If our nation is left vulnerable in the coming months, it will not be because we don’t have enough domestic spying powers. It will be because your Administration has not done enough to defeat terrorist organizations – including al Qaeda -- that have gained strength since 9/11. We do not have nearly enough linguists to translate the reams of information we currently collect. We do not have enough intelligence officers who can penetrate the hardest targets, such as al Qaeda. We have surged so many intelligence resources into Iraq that we have taken our eye off the ball in Afghanistan and Pakistan. As a result, you have allowed al Qaeda to reconstitute itself on your watch. You have also suggested that Congress must grant retroactive immunity to telecommunications companies. As someone who has been briefed on our most sensitive intelligence programs, I can see no argument why the future security of our country depends on whether past actions of telecommunications companies are immunized.
Letter to President Bush from Congressman Reyes What a fantastic letter! There's lots of good stuff in there beyond my excerpt above. Go read the entire text. Makes me wish I could vote in Texas.
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Sony's Rube Goldberg Device

So I decided to download the new demo of Patapon for the PSP. This marks the first time I downloaded something for the PSP via the PS3. In the past I've downloaded files on PC or Mac and just put those files on the memory stick, but I figured, hey let's try the PS3. This is a silly process. Here's what you do. 1 ) Download the title via the store. At least you can download in the background now, so you can go play something else while stuff downloads. 2 ) OK, now the title you downloaded (which, mind you is a PSP demo) needs to install onto the PS3. This happens for anything you get from the Playstation Network store - you have to install it to the PS3 before you can use it. It would be nice if this occurred in the background as well, but I suppose I can see how random hard drive and CPU access during gameplay would be bad. 3 ) Now you need to connect the PSP to the PS3. This requires using a USB connection cable, no wireless here, no sir! 4 ) Now you run the program on the PS3 to install the software to the PSP. 5 ) Now you can delete the PS3 installer. 6 ) Now you think you're done, but wait! Has it been more than a week since the last time you upgraded the PSP firmware? (I kid Sony, but they do happen about monthly. Put it this way, I bought a new PSP holiday title (Final Fantasy Tactics) and my firmware was *four revs* behind.) 7 ) Turn on the PSP Wifi and check for Network Updates. Log into your network. (You do have your network configured already right? Else it's another whole hoo-hah.) 8 ) Download the update. 9 ) Reboot the PSP and install the update. 10 ) Delete the firmware update from the PSP memory stick. That's it! In just 10 easy steps you've installed a hot new game demo on your PSP!
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iPod/Podcast Tip

Did I mention that I got an iPod classic for Christmas, so now I watch video podcasts on my iPod? Well I did. It's fantastic, and it also plays Phase by Harmonix. :-) Anyway the fact that podcasts are listed in reverse chronological order is very annoying. I finally got annoyed enough to look up a work-around. Here's the trick: When you pick Podcasts from the menu you get a list of podcast feeds, showing how many episodes you have of each feed. Select a feed and press Play, not Select. If you do this it plays the episodes in chronological order. As a bonus, it will seamlessly segue to the next track in the list when it finishes. That sounds sort of obvious, but it's NOT the way it works when you play individual podcasts from the reverse chronological list. I don't know how extensive the support for this is. It works on my iPod classic. Edit 2/15/08 I forgot to mention that this only works if you have shuffle turned off. Sorry for any confusion!
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The Most of P.G. Wodehouse

I've piled up some books to review. Let's dive in shall we? Today's book is The Most of P.G. Wodehouse by well, P.G. Wodehouse (duh!). Some of you may not recognize the name but will know him as the author of the Jeeves and Wooster stories. I picked this up last summer after my quasi-regular Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy binges. (A series that JP should totally read some day!) Often when I do these I only read the first four books, and then add on the pair of Dirk Gently books depending on mood. But this last time I read Mostly Harmless and The Salmon of Doubt. Douglas Adams called Wodehouse one of the greatest writers in the English language, that's good enough for me to check him out. This was not the first time I had considered reading Wodehouse, but this was the straw that broke the camel's back. Having made the decision to read such a prolific author the next choice is where to begin? This book was positioned as a "best of" sort of title in the Amazon reviews, so it seemed a good place to start. To be honest, I'm not sure it's the best introduction to his work. It contains selections from several of his "themes" - stories from the Drones Club setting, ones about Golf and so forth. Jeeves is the last section of the book and after a few short stories the book contains the complete text of the novel Quick Service I enjoyed this book overall, but I don't think it really is a "best of". Jeeves is by far the best material and it doesn't start until page 459. Even there, I think the characters get more room to act in the novel, so the best part is saved for last. The Drones Club section that opens the book was decent, but it was my second least favorite section (Golf being the worst). It's a good survey of the breadth of Wodehouse, but that means you're sampling from a variety of plates. I think on balance I would have rather focused on Blandings or Jeeves and skipped some of the other settings. I'll read some more Wodehouse in the future. I didn't really get the "best wordsmith of the English language" vibe from most of this, but I did quite like several bits.
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