More Kickstarter Projects That Need Your Support

I was checking out Kickstarter tonight because I saw Obsidian funded a Kickstarter project for a new RPG called Project Eternity. It is supposed to be a combination of Baldur’s Gate, Icewind Dale, and Planscape: Torment. Unfortunately I missed the opportunity to help this project, but I found some others worth funding.

HD Interactive is trying to make a sequel to its popular space game Nexus: The Jupiter Incident. Nexus 2: The Gods Awaken will pick up where Nexus left off and expand on many of its features. It should be available for PC and Mac.

Tom Hall (of id fame) and Brenda Brathwaite (of the Wizardry series) are trying to make Shaker: An Old School RPG. It will be available for PC and Mac. Linux support will be available of they get enough support. If they almost double their support they will make 2 RPGs!

For those who love 4X strategy games, there’s M.O.R.E. In the spirit of Master of Orion 2, M.O.R.E. will be an old school turn-based 4X strategy game available for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Finally, Chris Roberts of Wing Commander fame is making Star Citizen, a sandbox space sim where you are free to be or do as you please.

Please check out these great projects and lend your support to the continuing effort of people and companies trying to make the games we gamers want but publishers won’t pay for anymore. Disclaimer: I have personally backed all of these projects.

GOG.com supports Mac

GOG.com has joined some of the other PC game digital distributors who offer some of their games in PC and Mac format.  In GOG’s case, some of this will be easy because their DOS games can run under DOSBOX just as well on Mac as PC. Others may take a little longer. They will start with 50 titles and plan on offering more later.

Go to GOG.com to read all about this important change and trend in game digital distribution.

Classic Shell

The biggest complaint about Windows 8 is the Metro interface. Along with that, we lost the Start Menu. Microsoft has decided, like they have in the past with changes to the Start Menu and toolbars in Office and other products, to force users to do things their way. The great thing about PC software is that someone usually comes up with a way to put things back the way they were before. Despite Microsoft’s attempts to prevent reinsertion of the Start Menu, people have done just that.

A free way to get back the Start Menu in Windows 8 and boot straight to the desktop like in previous versions of Windows is Classic Shell. Classic Shell is a free program available on Source Forge that gives you a Start Menu in Windows 8 (or changes the menu in Windows 7) with different Start Menus from previous versions of Windows. It also lets you change the way Explorer works and change the interface for IE 9. If you are hesitant to move to Windows 8 because of the Metro UI (and who isn’t) check out Classic Shell. It works as advertised, giving you many options and bypassing Metro so you can enjoy the real upgrades in Windows 8. Thanks Maximum PC for discussing this project in your review of Windows 8.

Wings of Steele: Destination Unknown

This is my first foray into independently published authors and also into the Kindle Owner’s Lending Library. The Lending Library lets Amazon Prime members borrow certain Kindle books for your Kindle (not Kindle app); you can borrow one book per month. I was pleasantly surprised by how good this book was. It started off a little slow and I kept wondering when and how they were going to get into space, but those questions were shortly answered. There were some implausibilities in the beginning such as how easy the characters accepted their situation once in space, or how two people who just met decide they not only are going to sleep together immediately but experience love at first sight.

However, once I moved through several chapters, the story started picking up and the storyline flowed much better and much more interestingly. Speaking of chapters, one thing I did notice is some chapters were short, but some were very, very long, so there was definitely no consistency to chapter length. Also, there were many typos in the book; they weren’t too distracting, but the author should consider a professional editor for his next book. There are bits of foul language here and there, but it doesn’t distract from the story. Also, the author did a nice job of moving through the bedroom scenes without actually getting into the details of what happened.

On the positive side, the author had several good fight scenes and some great tense moments in the book where you just wanted to read a little more to find out what happens next. Later in the book the author introduces us to some overarching storyline about aliens looking for the prime planet where life began in the universe. This is somehow related to the prologue of the book which is explained at this point about 3/4 of the way through. This is really a setup for some sequels and can pretty much be ignored if you just want to enjoy this book on its own. The nice thing with this is the author ties up pretty much all plot threads by the end. There’s one other mystery hanging out plus a discovery at the end of the book about one of the characters that is not resolved by the end of the book.

Overall, I recommend this book as a nice science fiction story with some great fighting throughout. This book is currently available on the Kindle from Amazon.com. You can get more information on the series at wingsofsteele.com.

Homefront

I knew what I was getting when I purchased this game in a Steam sale for under $10. I had already read about the short single player campaign. But I figured for this cheap I would give it a shot. First off, I wouldn’t pay more than $10 for this game ever. So if you can find it cheap, it will provide about 5 hours of single player fun. I would also add that the game was not good or bad, but merely okay.It was supposed to be THQ’s answer to Call of Duty, but it failed miserably.

This is the first “console” shooter I have played and now I know why I don’t like console games. I think it’s funny people fight over which is better, but frankly they are totally different animals. There’s checkpoint saves which are lame because they force you to replay parts over and over again. I am a die hard PC gamer who prefers to save anywhere. If you don’t want to save constantly, that’s your choice, but give me the choice to play the game the way I prefer. Then there is the fact that this was more of an interactive movie than a game. Not only are you on rails, but you are constantly told what you need to do. There are many guns strewn about the levels, but you don’t have time to examine which one is better than another. When the one you have is low on ammo and you can’t find anymore, pick up another gun (you can carry 2 at a time). You can’t even move up and down ladders; you press the use key and the game climbs you up the ladder. If you don’t know where to go, look at the top of the screen for the 3 sergeant stripes that tell you where to go and how far away you are. There’s no health packs; you auto heal yourself so if you are wounded just hide behind something until the screen is no longer red.

I will say there were a couple of slow-motion scenes in which you fought people that were kind of cool. But you spend most of your time following one or more comrades who can’t ever die in combat. The game tries to break up the monotony with its storyline and some vehicle combat. A couple of times you man the guns on top of a Humvee for some brief rail-shooting action. Then there’s the helicopter level. I had a hard time flying this thing. I tried a gamepad, but couldn’t do well with it so I stuck with mouse and keyboard. It was very hard until you got high in the air. Also, in another show of game developers telling you how to play, you have to get next to 3 trucks to unload your people and take control of them. Unfortunately, you have to start with the last one first then move to the front. Otherwise, you can’t unload your people. How about giving me some choices here?

As part of the Steam sale I picked up a game guide for about $2. Surprisingly, it was a waste of money. First off, as I said earlier, the game tells you what to do so you don’t need a guide. Second. the only way to access the guide is through Steam which redirects you to a website. It would be better for me to look at the guide on another screen instead of pausing my game, leaving, and looking at something and then going back. No more Steam guides for me.

I know this isn’t COD, but I fail to see what all the hype is about. I guess people  love the multiplayer, but how many times can you run around maps shooting people until you get bored? I’ve personally always preferred a good single player experience with a good story.

To recap, try this game if you can find it cheap, but don’t expect much more than several hours of shooting up bad guys with a variety of standard weapons.

Player-Improved Games

I was on GOG.com today and I read a how-to on improving Baldur’s Gate 1 & 2 by updating them for modern systems, but also adding back in content the developer removed from the final version of the games. I think this is kind of a cool thing for players, especially in cases where a game is unpolished and released and the developer has given up on it for one reason or another. Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 2 is such a game. Although, a fan-made update was just mentioned in the latest issue of PC Gamer, I downloaded the updates a few months ago. Another game I did this for was Vampire the Masquerade: Bloodlines. I purchased it from Steam and then applied the update which some fans created to add-in deleted content and improve the game.

It’s great that fans of games take the time to fix broken games or bring classic games up-to-date. This is one of the reasons PC gaming is better than anything else.

New Amazon Kindle Fires

Big announcement from Amazon last week about their new Kindle lineup. Here I will just focus on the Kindle Fire because that’s where I think the future of the device is and that’s the most exciting part for me. The new 7″ Kindle Fire is $159 with 8 GB of storage. It is similar to the 1st generation Fire except with some updated hardware making it faster.

The other new Fires include an HD display, better sound, and faster Wi-Fi thanks to MIMO. The 7″ model similar to the first generation Fire sells for $199 for 16GB and $249 for 32GB. Amazon also released an 8.9″ model of the Fire. The cheaper one is similar to the 7″ HD model and sells for $299 for 16Gb or $369 for 32 GB.

The most exciting HD model is also the most expensive one. It is 8.9″ with the same features as the other 8.9″ HD model except that it comes with 4G LTE making it a true anywhere device. It is $499 for 32 GB or $599 for 64 GB. For $49.99 per year you get a 250 MB per month 4G data plan. This scared me at first, but then I read they also offer 3 GB and 5 GB monthly data plans.

Check out all the new Kindles (including the e-ink models) at Amazon.com.

Command & Conquer Ultimate Collection

I just noticed this today on Origin for pre-order. EA had released a nice collection of the C & C games a while back called Command & Conquer The First Decade, but people complained that they hadn’t updated the games to run on modern systems. This new collection says the games have been updated for Windows Vista and 7. It includes 17 games in all (including the games and expansion packs).

Even though I have all of the games I want to play, I will probably still get this just to play on modern systems. Red Alert 2 is one of my favorite games of all times. It was tough, but I can say I did finish both campaigns without cheating.

If you are a C & C fan, you may want to consider this one. If you have never played these games, get this collection when it comes out. There are a few duds, but the others are some of the best RTS games of all time. Check it all out at the commandandconquer.com website.

Change Windows Product Key through Command Line

I just started playing around with Windows 8 (and am not too happy with it, but I’ll save that for another time). I ran into a problem with activation after a fresh install on my netbook. The install never asked me for the product key so activation failed. I knew there was a way to change the product key, but quickly became fed-up trying to find things in Windows 8. After a quick Internet search I found a method for Windows 7 (that happens to work in Windows 8 as well, thanks Darin Smith):

  1. Open a command prompt in Administrator mode.
  2.  Type: slmgr.vbs -ipk <product key>
  3. Try to activate Windows again through the GUI or type: slmgr.vbs -ato

After I put in a valid product key, Windows activated successfully.