Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microsoft. Show all posts

Sunday, November 16, 2014

Why We Still Love Halo the Most


Why We Still Love Halo the Most


Halo is probably the most iconic FPS that ever has existed. I don't care how many Call of Duty's come out...Halo will still hold a special place in my (Mom) heart. Maybe it is because I spent a majority of my early college days on a 13-inch tube-tv playing Halo 2 online, and kicking ass at that. Or maybe it is because I survived many a midnight release of each installment of the series. PERHAPS it is just because the game has that familiar feeling.

When you start up any Halo game, and hear that nostalgic music, you almost choke up a bit. Wait...you don't? Okay, I might just be a super weirdo, but that's okay.

Halo: Master Chief Collection provides an epic bundle for Xbox One owners, and it totally delivers. Although right now servers are a little jacked up, the graphical upgrade more than makes up for it.

We aren't going to do a full series of this game, but we wanted to at least play online to show you guys some of the upgrades this collection provides. I realized through this endeavor that since I haven't played Halo in a REALLY long time, I suck...like really suck. So I'm going to practice now that I know that I have literally lost any skill I had once acquired in my teen years.


Check out our video below and stay tuned for some exciting new series we will be releasing in line with the hottest releases of this holiday season.



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Thursday, October 16, 2014

The Reset Button: What I'm excited for - Halo: The Master Chief Collection.



What I'm excited for: Halo - The Master Chief Collection.

As a gamer, it's easy for me to get excited for a new game hitting the market. But with the current generation doing more and more in terms of remasters and collections, it's hard to get excited for something I've played, beaten, and left behind. True, there may be a handful of games I'd happily go through again if remastered, but I don't hold a candle for it actually happening.

What Microsoft and 343 Industries has done is peaked my excitement for a collection. To put it plainly, it's the grandmaster of all collections. Halo: The Master Chief Collection.


John-117's greatest adventures in one package.

With Halo 5: Guardians on the books for Q4 2015, fans like me were clamoring for an adventure with Master Chief on the Xbox One. To calm the fan base and give us something to keep our controllers busy, 343 Industries is putting Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary Edition, Halo 2 (with an "anniversary edition" makeover), Halo 3, and Halo 4 on one disc.

Due out November 11th, 2014, The Master Chief Collection puts all the bells and whistles together for one of the best collections ever released. When Halo 2 multiplayer was shut down a few years ago, fans fought for as long as they could to keep it alive. 8 players who stayed logged in after the servers shut down were able to keep playing until their internet disconnected them or they powered their system down. They held out, but eventually all 8 were booted offline somehow and Halo 2 multiplayer was a thing of the past. A memory for all Halo fans of one of the best multiplayer experiences ever.

I loved Halo 2 multiplayer. Back in 2004-2005, I would grab a 2-liter of Mountain Dew (I was 20 at the time of release and didn't always have access to booze), some Taco Bell (another poor choice), and hit Halo 2 multiplayer until the wee morning hours. Those were amazing times with a lot of cool people on Xbox Live. This was before the days of douchebag kids on Call of Duty shouting racial and homophobic slurs. This was just a bunch of people playing Halo 2 online. Plasma Swords, battle rifles, and melee attacks were on the docket. And it was good.

Well, like Surge, it's coming back. 343 Industries is bringing back the full Halo 2 multiplayer experience in the Master Chief Collection. All maps will be included, all remastered in glorious HD graphics. All original modes are back, which has me extremely excited. I've never had as much fun playing an online shooter as I did Halo 2. Halo 3 and Reach were fun because they were Halo, Gears of War had it's moments when playing with friends, and CoD/BF were decent when you weren't getting called the n-word, but Halo 2 was the granddaddy of them all. So I'm beyond excited to get back into it online.

Dual-wielding, son.

All four games will run at 60fps in 1080p resolution. Can you say "gorgeous"? There will also be lighting upgrades to make things really pop.

The Master Chief Collection is going to keep me very busy until Halo 5: Guardians drops. It has been a long while since I've played Halo: Combat Evolved and Halo 2. I'm very confident the story will pull me back in like it did over 10 years ago. 

If you own a Xbox One, the Master Chief Collection is a definite buy. The amount of content in this collection is top of the line and the multiplayer on all 4 games is some of the best ever, with Halo 2 being my personal best ever. And if you've never played Halo before, you're in for one of the most entertaining gaming experiences ever. Master Chief is the face of the Xbox franchise and this collection will once again show why. 343 Industries has outdone themselves, making a fan like me happy of the treatment Halo is getting after Bungie walked away from the franchise.

November 11th, I return to Halo 2. Get out your plasma pistols and take aim, folks. Because I won't miss.

Game on.

-ML

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Trophies and Achievements: Why I love them and why I hate them.


Thursday. Almost Friday, but not quite. Also, it's the day I post a new edition of "The Reset Button". Lately, I've been putting more time into my PS4 and Xbox One games. Last weekend, I finally completed Watch_Dogs 100% on PlayStation 4. In doing this, I ended up earning the illustrious "Platinum Trophy". After I was finished, something sparked in my mind.

Why do I care about Trophies and Achievements? Should I let these hold me back from moving on to another game when I haven't earn them all? Are they ruining gaming?

The answer isn't as simple as I was hoping it would be.

Trophies and Achievements, for those not on a last-gen or current-gen system, are virtual accomplishments earned for completing specific challenges in a game. These can range anywhere from completing a story-line mission, collections X amount of items, killing X amount of enemies, or doing a specific activity in a game. The really hold no value and just go towards your gamer profile, showing what you've accomplished over the years you've been gaming on a specific system.

But they tend to be addicting.

Which brings me to my article. Why I love and why I hate Trophies and Achievements.

Why I love them as a gamer.

As a gamer, I strive to get the biggest bang for my buck out of a game purchase. Games like Fallout, The Elder Scrolls, and Grand Theft Auto reside high on my list of favorites because they provide almost endless hours of gameplay possibilities. I have grown accustomed to grouping Trophies and Achievements into the "content" category of games I buy. If I can complete a game and go after the remaining Trophies/Achievements in a reasonable amount of time before I list the game on 99gamers, I'll do it. 

Take Watch_Dogs, for example. I had just about all Trophies completed by the time the credits rolled. I took some time off, played something else, then went back and wrapped up the last 2 Trophies I needed for the "Platinum" to pop. Once that happened, I listed it on 99gamers to send out to a new gamer. Once that 100% completion was hit, there was nothing left for me to accomplish. Story is wrapped up 100%, all Trophies are unlocked, and there is no real "multiplayer" mode worth holding onto it for. So away it goes.

Trophies and Achievements can add another dynamic to boring games that don't hold your interest in regards to story or multiplayer. You can spend your time hunting Trophies instead of dreading the game you're playing. You're probably saying, "But I can just go trade it in and get something I like," which is true. You could. But you'd also be wasting at least half of what you spent on the game when you take it to your local gaming store. I'm looking for value, as you've read in my previous articles. Personally, I can stomach the worst of the worst in regards to games, so hunting Trophies and Achievements help me get my money's worth out of a game instead of trading it in and having to spend more money.


The illustrious Platinum Trophy. Gold, Silver, and Bronze also featured.

I'm also a fan of Trophies and Achievements because of the thought that can go into them. The first Achievement that made me laugh was in the shooter "Army of Two". If you performed 50 melee kills, you'd unlock an Achievement named "Flip You. Flip You For Real." If you've seen "The Usual Suspects", you'd understand what this was in reference to. I remember laughing at the creativity and thought that went into this. Afterwards, funny Trophies and Achievements kept popping up. There is even one titled "Money Launderer" that I need to unlock in honor of my gamer tag.

Things like this, along with the bragging rights that come from having a higher Trophy count or gamer score than your friends, keep me coming back to hunting Trophies and Achievements. But it isn't all sunshine and rainbows. There are some things I hate about them.

Why I hate them as a gamer.

One thing I hate about hunting Trophies and Achievements is the amount of that can go into completing some of them. Specifically the online/multiplayer types. Many of these require countless hours of death-match or other game modes, which is something I normally won't do. I tend to lean more towards the single player experience, as online games not played with friends tend to feature the underbelly of gaming more often than not. And it's something I look to avoid. So instead of fully completing a game and feeling satisfied, I end up listing the game online after a few hours of multiplayer when I realize I don't have the time to dedicate to it.

Achievements can also keep you coming back to a game that should have been sent out to pasture long ago. This may conflict with my value-drive statement, but hear me out. Some games are meant to be played, beaten, and traded. But sometimes, you find yourself chasing one last Achievement that you just can't unlocked. It slowly drives you insane until you find yourself only playing this one game to unlock the last Achievement. 

Congrats! You've unlocked an Achievement!

In the PS2 and before days, this problem was non-existent. You'd buy a game, beat it, and move on. You grind to 100% a game because it was fun, not because you unlocked a virtual trophy. They can add content, sure, but they can also strip a good game of it's fun factor if you get caught up in hunting just the Achievements without spending time to enjoy the game. But this is only for the hard-core hunters, which I do not consider myself to be. I'm more of a recreational Trophy Whore. 

Some would argue that Achievements and Trophies add nothing of value to a game and strip them of their fun. While I agree to an extent, I get a feeling of satisfaction when I 100% a game and unlock everything. If there are online Trophies/Achievements, I move on. Easy solution. I'd rather skip those instead of destroying the fun a game provides.

My favorite part of Trophies/Achievements: Tracking.

The number one thing I like about unlocking more Trophies and Achievements are the tracking websites. Websites like TrueTrophies and TrueAchievements are dedicated to tracking your Trophy/Achievement progress across your gaming profile. You can see how many days in a row you've unlocked a Trophy/Achievement, how many you have compared to friends, your most valuable Trophy/Achievement, and many more statistics. It's pretty cool to go back and see the very first Trophy/Achievement you unlocked and how many you've unlocked over your entire gaming career on a system.

Go sign up for these free sites and start keeping track of your progress. You may find it's as fun as I think it is. You can even have competitions with your friends.

Think you can unlock more Trophies or Achievements than me? Extend the challenge.

Beating me would be the ultimate Achievement.

Until next week...

Game On.

-ML