Showing posts with label Timesplitters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timesplitters. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 June 2012

Why petitioning for a game to be made is important

Timesplitters. I freaking love it. Then one day I found out that Free Radical Design (the creators of the series) had gone bankrupt and then been bought out by Crytek. That was 3 years ago, and any news of 'Crytek UK' making Timesplitters 4 has died out.


And then I found a Facebook group trying to petition for it's release. At the time of writing, 1,324 people support the page which has a target of 100,000. In many respects it seems silly. Facebook fans does not translate into financial backing or any of the hard work required to make the game.

But there is no other clearer way of telling a game company what you want to buy!

Petitioning is a direct representation of what people want. It's the mob-turned-statistics that get the proverbial ball rolling. It's market research that doesn't guess trends but actually tells the game makers out there what they should do!

1,324 is not a lot, but it is 1,324 clear votes of confidence for a game that doesn't even exist yet. That's got to be compelling!

The petition can be found here

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Quick update

Hello there!

This is just a quick update about stuff that I'm playing and stuff that's grabbed my attention as of late. Will be posting another chunky article in the near future but until then:

  • Have decided I won't be buying any new games until I complete a game I already own. By complete I only mean the main plot (or equivalent experience) but I am infamously slow!
  • Playing the 'Nuzlocke challenge' on Pokemon Yellow. Just defeated Brock (Butterfree with Confusion FTW) but now finding it quite hard getting through all the trainers to Mt. Moon
  • Recently downloaded the demo for The Walking Dead episode 1. Never read the comics, but the gameplay is a real treat! A fusion of point-and-click adventures (which the studio Tell Tale Games are famous for) and something more akin to a light-gun game. More info can be found on the website.
  • The last game I bought, Kingdoms of Amalur Reckoning, is taking up most of the rest of my gaming time. Really getting into it (even if I had something to say about some of it's weapon designs). Just reached the rather Tolkien-feeling Webwood: where my goblinesque character 'Nod' is carving a name for herself in circles both virtuous and otherwise. More importantly, assassinating is really really fun!
  • My Gamecube is also seeing more light of day (figuratively) with Timesplitters Future Perfect and Gotcha Force. Both great, if entirely different, games from yesteryear.
If you like where this blog is going, be sure to subscribe and more stuff will be posted soon!

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

The joys of Timesplitters Future Perfect


For those of you who don't know, Timesplitters was a video game first started in 2000 with a cult hit PS2 simply called 'Timesplitters' and went on to spawn two sequels for the three major consoles of the time. The final game, 'Timesplitters Future Perfect' was released in 2005 and whilst it lacked a certain rough-hewn charm of the games before it (mostly thanks to EA's tight control) it is a supremely joyous experience.

And thanks to a good friend of mine (who's amazingly insightful blog can be found here) I have now got my Gamecube up and running!

Just to give you a flavour of what is so great about this quirky first-person shooter, here are some of my favourite elements:

  • Flare guns
  • Duel-wielding flare guns
  • Monkeys
  • Zombies
  • Zombie monkeys
  • The underground world of professional cat racing
  • Brick fights
  • A very silly, childish and British sense of humour
  • Harry Tipper
  • A surprisingly flexible mapmaker
  • A development team made up of past Rare employees who worked on Goldeneye
  • Gingerbread men
If you get the chance to play this game, do so! It was released for the PS2, Gamecube and original Xbox, and copies will also work on Wiis and some older PS3 models. As one friend put it to me, after killing a ninja monkey with a flamethrower: They just don't make games like this anymore!