By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Monday news, the third part:

Train people are dang pleased with this line operations sim because it's not too hardcore, nor too simple
https://www.pcgamer.com/train-people-are-dang-pleased-with-this-line-operations-sim-because-its-not-too-hardcore-nor-too-simple/
A new train game is picking up steam in the train game community, with Railroader picking up 97% positive reviews on Steam since its December 7 Early Access launch. A sim of both driving the trains as well as routing them, choosing cargo, and picking passengers, Railroader looks to appeal to both the sim crowd and the less-hardcore folks who enjoy games like Euro and American Truck Simulator—even roping in a few strategy and transport sim types who enjoy games like Transport Fever.

Here's one for people who like Vampire Survivors, bullet hell, and when games go all meta and screw with you
https://www.pcgamer.com/heres-one-for-people-who-like-vampire-survivors-bullet-hell-and-when-games-go-all-meta-and-screw-with-you/
Wild and weird action roguelike Picayune Dreams released from Early Access recently, meaning it's definitely time to enjoy this thing if you're a fan of horde survival roguelikes, bullet hells, or games that get all meta and screwy. Populated by a cast of surrealist 3D renders that look like rejected 1990s clipart and backed up with a very serious drum and bass breakcore soundtrack, this is an indie that's decidedly, committedly into a specific aesthetic.

There's a Starfield bug that makes it crash more often if you don't start New Game+
https://www.pcgamer.com/theres-a-starfield-bug-that-makes-it-crash-more-often-if-you-dont-start-new-game/
Stop me if you've heard this one before. The longer you play this Bethesda RPG, the more unstable it becomes. Am I talking about Oblivion's reference bug, or Skyrim's PS3 lag bug? (That's our brand director Tim Clark there holding Bethesda's feet to the fire on the latter.) Nope, I'm talking about Starfield, where players who have racked up hundreds of hours—not that uncommon in a Bethesda RPG—are experiencing more crashes the longer they play.

WoW Classic's Season of Discovery revives the old-school tradition of random players ruining your day, stealing a vital item that costs five gold to access
https://www.pcgamer.com/wow-classics-season-of-discovery-revives-the-old-school-tradition-of-random-players-ruining-your-day-stealing-a-vital-item-that-costs-five-gold-to-access/
One of the more interesting things about WoW Classic's Season of Discovery (SoD) is how it's recaptured that vanilla feeling of going on little adventures. This is done mainly through its runes system.
In case you're unfamiliar, every class in SoD has access to runes that give them important, build-defining abilities. For example, to get a Molten Blast that lets my shaman hold aggro as a tank, I had to team up with three other randoms to Flame Shock a lobster man out of a block of ice.
In other places, these runes have also recaptured the old-school feeling of getting absolutely screwed over by complete strangers.



Please excuse my bad English.

Currently gaming on a PC with an i5-4670k@stock (for now), 16Gb RAM 1600 MHz and a GTX 1070

Steam / Live / NNID : jonxiquet    Add me if you want, but I'm a single player gamer.