Still playing Borderlands 3 as my main PS game. 2 vaults down, don’t know how many more left.

ATOM RPG is hard! I don’t recall having such trouble with Fallout 1 and 2. Either they weren’t this hard or I have become used to easier games. I think my problem is how I distributed my stats, giving me a very intelligent but a weak character, that keeps dying in actual fights.

Read up a bit on it about character stats, and thinking about starting a new game with new character.

While I kept dying in ATOM RPG, I looked through my backlog and started Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Justice for All. I loved the first one, but took a break before diving deep in the next one. So, playing through that now. Still a great game, might even be better than the first one. I’ll probably finish this before I go back to ATOM.

Also started Trails in the Sky: Second Chapter on PC. Prologue was very interesting, just started Chapter 1. Playing it slowly on the side, when I generally don’t have access to PS and Switch, not cause the game isn’t fun, but because I don’t enjoy playing on PC much. Fortunately only Trails in the Sky is left on PC, and all other games are available on console, so shouldn’t be too much of a trouble.

What about all of you? What have you been playing?

  • conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    Madden just came out. I wasn’t going to bother right away (even though I’d buy way before it’s discounted), but seeing flashes of polish from our rookie QB in preseason games got me back in football mode. Annoyingly, custom playbooks don’t work online, and the play art in the new version is really goofy, but it plays fast and there’s a big gap between making the right decision or not.

    I was playing blasphemous 2 before that. It has a lot of the similar feel. I don’t really like the thorns building up on multiple deaths, though. I’m buried in the currency, so it’s more just an inconvenience to go all the way back to fix it than an actual “cost” of sloppiness.