Yeah, many users of hardwareswap were not thrilled to hear they’d be moving to Discord.
Yeah, many users of hardwareswap were not thrilled to hear they’d be moving to Discord.
I needed a lawn mower for my tiny patch of grass so I went with Ryobi. I’ve since bought/been gifted Ryobi for every yard tool I have.
My drills and impact driver are DeWalt. Way better than the shitty Black & Decker drill that I got in a free gift from work.
Company was bought by a VC group with no experience in the industry. They spent their resources in all the wrong places, leading to alienated employees with no morale. They were also behind on office rental payments.
We had no formal IT or standard laptop hardware or software. One team decided they were all done after their director left. The CEO decided that they were colluding and fired them all at once. Nobody else was cleared for that project’s SCIF, meaning nobody could contact the customer over secure channels. Additionally, their drives were encrypted with personal passwords that were never turned over as the employees had no proper exit process.
Between that and my team slowly leaving due to morale, they lost 2/3 of the few contracts they had, along with the technical expertise responsible for them.
Sly Cooper would be fantastic on modern hardware. Thieves in Time is a lot better when emulated because it fixes the game’s most glaring flaw compared to the PS2 games: load times. I can only imagine a Sly game designed to be run off an NVMe drive with modern graphical capabilities. I wonder how its art style would be adapted to higher fidelity.
This is my current PlayStation merch collection
These are the games I own cases for. I have a few PS1 games in one of those CD binders.
Truthfully, the most I’ve played of any game to the right of Sly Cooper on the top shelf is like, 20 minutes of Resistance. I got some of them from a friend who was trying to get some money at the time. The PS2 games are all ones that are dear to me.
I also have a wall of Devil May Cry stuff. It’s multiplatform these days, but mentioning it since it started on PlayStation.
Hello!
1
My first console was the original PlayStation, which I got from my grandpa on my birthday in 1998. It came with a demo disc that had Spyro, Metal Gear Solid, and many others. I got a PS2 from my mom for Hanukkah in 2003. I had a PS1, so I was confused when the gift I unwrapped was HyperSonic.Xtreme for the PS2. I remember telling her that the PS1 couldn’t play it and being met with a much bigger box to unwrap, the PS2. Truly a core memory for me. I have later consoles as well, but those first two have specific memories attached to them.
2
My favorite series that started on the Playstation is Devil May Cry.
My favorite exclusive alternates between Ratchet and Clank, and Rachet and Clank: Going Commando. Going Commando was my first Ratchet and Clank game. I was excited to get it after seeing some of the crazy commercials Insomniac made. Being a sequel, it has a lot of improvements over the first game - tighter controls, strafing, an upgrade system, a larger quantity of more varied weapons, and so on. But as I’ve replayed the original trilogy more, I’ve learned to love the original for what it is, which is a much more measured, almost puzzle-like shooter-platformer. The limited arsenal and movement means you have to be particular about how you engage enemies rather than trying to run and gun. Also, the music is at its most unique, with funky beats and orchestral strings throughout. Not to take away from Going Commando, which also has an amazing soundtrack. It’s in stereo (the first’s is not) and really shines when listened to with headphones. Silver City - Boldan has an effect I would never hear on my mono CRT.
On the whole, I’m a fan of Ratchet and Clank, Jak and Daxter, Sly Cooper, and recently the original Metal Gear Solid. I had never played it despite it being on that demo disc. Another series I have a soft spot for is Dynasty Warriors. I have all of the PS2 mainline games. Lots of core memories attached to it because of co-op with my friend. God of War 2018 was great, and I kind of regret not getting Ragnarok when it was on sale.
3
I recommend the platformer trilogies I mentioned above. I think Sly 2 is the best game of the 9. A good story, varied locations, great mechanics, a unique spin on an open-world style game. I recommend Going Commando as a first Ratchet and Clank game, because of the tighter controls and better features, without some of the rushed-development pitfalls that Up Your Arsenal has. I like Jak 2 more than Jak 3, but I think Jak 3 is the easiest to recommend - again, features, QOL stuff, much more forgiving checkpoints, etc.
4
The gifting memory above is one. Staying up all night playing the platformer trilogies (and other games) with my friend. Waking up to hearing him still farming crystals on Grelbin. Launching endless Sentinel remote rockets at AI bots on Skyrail in 007 Nightfire with another friend (RIP). A lot of Dynasty Warriors co-op.
5
I played God of War 2018 a few months ago, but I recently built a portable gaming PC for longer vacations and have been using it to emulate Dynasty Warriors 3. My brain is mush after work + family, so the button mashing and bad voice acting works nicely. Plus it’s got all kinds of progression (stats, items, weapon, musou mode clears), so it’s real nice for feeling like I’m doing something while I’m doing nothing. Gan Ning is broken.
I could ramble more, but I’ve already went on way longer than anyone else. Oops!
Well, they made an offer to John Oliver to become a mod.