- 89 Posts
- 314 Comments
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldtoMicroblog Memes@lemmy.world•We had this in my house growing upEnglish
6·4 months agoThat’s still in my house. And if I have my way, it will outlive me.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Every RPG subgenre acronym, decodedEnglish
1·4 months agoARPG + MORPG hybrid with looter shooter characteristics.
It doesn’t really fit anywhere cleanly, though.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Every RPG subgenre acronym, decodedEnglish
2·5 months agoTerms can definitely be confusing. Diablo is definitely a hack-n’-slash, but it’s very different from the likes of Golden Axe and God of War.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Every RPG subgenre acronym, decodedEnglish
42·5 months agoThe ARPGs you’re probably referring to, I call them Diablo-likes to distinguish them from all the other action RPGs.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Every RPG subgenre acronym, decodedEnglish
6·5 months agoRNG = random number generator. In gaming, this just means random chance. Whenever loot drops, critical hits land, enemies spawn, or dice rolls decide outcomes, that’s RNG at work.
Eurojank is a term for European-developed games (usually from Central or Eastern Europe) that are ambitious, creative, and full of unique ideas… but also full of technical rough edges.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Every RPG subgenre acronym, decodedEnglish
9·5 months agoThere’s a lot of subgenres I wanted to include, but I felt this document was already too long. Here’s more of them:
- DBRPG = Deck-building RPG
- SurRPG = Survival RPG
- RLRPG = Rogue-like RPG
- SLRPG = Souls-like RPG
I don’t know why I overlooked GRPGs since Germany has some pretty important ones. You mentioned Gothic, but there’s also both the Sacred series and ELEX series.
I’d say that while both GRPGs and PRPGs are releated to each other, there’s some big differences that go beyond nationality. I’d say GRPGs are more like a muddy Renaissance faire going on while PRPGs have more of a storybook style.
EDIT: In the interest of thoroughness, I added even more subgenre acronyms.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Tetris Elements – one of the strangest Tetrises ever releasedEnglish
4·5 months agoTetris Plus is quite neat because, not only is there PlayStation and arcade versions, it was released for Game Boy too.
I regularly play it on my cabinet—it’s got a great PvP mode.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Tetris Elements – one of the strangest Tetrises ever releasedEnglish
4·5 months agoThey’re gone. No mascots. No background worlds. Just the “elemental” machine skins.
Tetris Worlds had eye monsters because THQ wanted a console-friendly mascot game.
Tetris Elements has industrial pipes because ValuSoft (THQ’s budget imprint) wanted a cheap, self-contained PC release that didn’t require any cross-project asset wrangling.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Tetris Elements – one of the strangest Tetrises ever releasedEnglish
4·5 months agoIt’s neat, but it’s not an officially licensed version of Tetris—whereas Tetris Elements is.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
Games@lemmy.world•Renovation was right—and we're ahead of scheduleEnglish
3·5 months agoUse vJoy + Universal Control Remapper (UCR), or reWASD, to mirror the controller input to all emulator instances.
This means pressing A once sends “A” to all 8 games.
Helen of Troy? Oh, don’t even get me started on her! She didn’t just cause the Trojan War—that was her warm-up gig!
The Crusades? Helen. Napoleonic Wars? Helen again. Both World Wars, the Cold War, Star Wars, Cola Wars—every single one is her fault!
Honestly, if she’d just stopped wishing for wars, we’d all be riding unicorns and eating ice cream for breakfast by now.
Thanks a lot, Helen.
That woman’s name? Helen of Troy.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Spectrum Holobyte’s 1988 DOS Tetris: the first official release – the start of a global obsessionEnglish
3·5 months agoIt’s interesting because everyone has their definitive version of Tetris.
For me, it was the arcade coin-op made by Atari Games.
I have a friend, though, who swears by Tetris Plus for the original PlayStation. That was the first Tetris she ever played.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Spectrum Holobyte’s 1988 DOS Tetris: the first official release – the start of a global obsessionEnglish
6·5 months agoHere, this exhaustively explains wall kicks and how they affect basic play in Tetris:
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Spectrum Holobyte’s 1988 DOS Tetris: the first official release – the start of a global obsessionEnglish
10·5 months agoThis is my original work, but here’s some further links if you’re curious:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetris_(Spectrum_HoloByte)
https://www.mobygames.com/game/1630/tetris
https://www.livescience.com/56481-strange-history-of-tetris.html
https://americanhistory.si.edu/explore/stories/tetris-fun-cold-war
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Ninja Gaiden for DOS: rated M for "mistake"English
2·5 months agoNope, they are abandonware. You either buy the physical disks or sail the seven seas.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Ninja Gaiden for DOS: rated M for "mistake"English
2·5 months agoBoth Thexder and Sorcerian were distributed by Sierra.
Thexder, in particular, was quite popular—got a Western-only sequel called Thexder 95 that was a showcase for Windows 95:
It’s still playable on modern Windows.
As for Japanese games, they’re largely hit or miss on DOS. If it’s a Capcom or Konami game—it’s probably terrible. SEGA is good.
I think the game that really humiliated Capcom was the DOS port of Street Fighter II. In the early 90s, a bunch of Koreans made their own unofficial port and it shamed the official port.
This might explain why Super Street Fighter II for DOS was so much better.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Ninja Gaiden for DOS: rated M for "mistake"English
2·5 months agoI’ve played many games from the era. There were quite a few DOS games that had much smoother scrolling even if there wasn’t specialized hardware for it. Thexder, made in 1988, is a good example of this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwHKg2aUB0I
The truth is, a good many Japanese games that were converted to DOS just weren’t very good.
There were exceptions, though. SEGA games tended to be excellent. And I have to say that anything by Nihon Falcom was amazing – to this day, Sorcerian is a standout on DOS.
atomicpoet@lemmy.worldOPto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Ninja Gaiden for DOS: rated M for "mistake"English
5·5 months agoThat happened to me more than once—though not with this game.

Totally is. FFVII was a watershed moment for JRPGs on PSX. Same is true for Trails on PC.
It’s just that recognition in the West for FFVII was instant. Meanwhile, due to localization, it took more than a decade for Trails to get recognition.
Maybe this is a better comparison: if FFVII is The Beatles, then Trails is the Velvet Underground. Beatles sold massive copies immediately. VU took awhile, but now everyone knows they’re just as impactful as the Beatles.