1 Hour of Fortnite

The first time I heard of Fortnite was reading about how Epic Games can give away a free game every week. Someone mentioned they can afford to do so because of all the money they make from Fortnite. Hmmmm, Fortnite must be a game made by Epic Games. Then I looked around and saw that it is a free-to-play third-person shooter/construction game where people can buy stuff with real money. It must be popular to be able to fund Epic Games with giving away free games. I did not think much of it and simply continued to enjoy getting the weekly freebies. Until Marvel showed up.

I really miss Marvel Heroes and was wondering how the Marvel Characters are integrated into Fortnite. Do you get to use the Marvel characters? Are they NPCs that you get to fight with/against? Most importantly, do I have to pay just to see them? Seeing that it is free-to-play, I thought it was time to try out Fortnite. Here are my thoughts on the first hour of Fortnite.

Lost is the word that describes my next 15 minutes or so. Or you could say it is exploring time. I had no idea what to do and where to go. I did see the play button but was looking for some sort of tutorial or character customisation area. After 15 minutes I decided to start a solo game.

Once the game has launched, the promotional Marvel cutscene plays, before being shown some ads or something talking about Battle Pass and buy… I don’t know, wasn’t really paying attention. A choice of three game modes appeared: PvE, Battle Royale and Creative. PvE looks like some sort of save the world campaign that must be bought. I have no idea what Creative is, because I chose Battle Royale.

The game starts, and it says I have to jump from the flying bus (Airbus?) to land on roof tops and break into buildings to get stuff. So, I am diving through the air, and I see a building so aim to land on it. Easy enough, just like Just Cause 2.

On top of a building was some bandages, a bolt-action sniper rifle and some ammo. There is no tutorial, but everything is intuitive enough and things are explained as you go.

While on the roof someone was shooting at me. They must be really bad at aiming because even while standing still they were missing me. I could not see where the shots were coming from, until I scoped in with the rifle. Slow moving target, 1 shot 1 kill. I thought “wow these bots are pretty bad. I must find a way to increase the difficulty.”

I randomly explored around and got a few more opponents and seeing all sorts of messages popup about who got who and what stuff I found and all sorts of stuff that is too much to remember. So far, nothing Marvel-lous around.

What is that purple stuff in the distance? Sentinels! Dead Sentinels. Time to take a closer look. The Sentinels sure showed that Fortnite had good scale. They were huge. There was an objective message saying to dance on their heads and it took me quite some time to figure out how to get on to their heads. I completed the objective and then another message popped up saying I was awarded something or something. I didn’t pay attention as the continuous shrinking battle circle went past me and I was starting to lose health outside the circle.

Getting back into the battle circle was easy enough, and I found lots of medkits to heal up. The rest of the game was spent wandering around aimlessly some more until I found opponents to shoot. The bots were too easy and even with their movements I could pick them off with the sniper rifle. Before long, Fortnite said I had won the game.

Well, not much of a solo game, but I did learn a lot and exploring around was interesting. I didn’t construct anything in the first game, because I didn’t see the need to. Wandering around looking for opponents was more fun. The highlight of the match, though, was seeing the huge Sentinels. Pity there were no X-Men around. The end of match debriefing awarded me with some stuff that I still don’t know what to do with. The debrief also said I had reached level 4. Level 1 to 4 in the first game? Doesn’t seem like much of a challenge, maybe I should play against some real people. For now, let’s start another solo game to learn more.

Hey, my character looks different. I guess rather than customising what your character looks like, they are generated for you each game. Same deal, jump off the air bus, land and get stuff. Unlike the first game, within 5 minutes I encountered and was taken care of by the first opponent. Whoa! That is a difficulty spike for a solo game. The game entered spectator mode, and I realised this was a real person playing.

The revelation hit me. In Fortnite, solo game means every one for themselves, not you alone vs bots. There can be real people in solo games. I look forward to more Fortnite games, hopefully, against more real opponents, because the bots have been abysmal.

After 1 hour, I thought Fortnite has a good variety of stuff and the exploring was interesting. It needs real people for good fun though. I still have no idea what to do with construction stuff, but hopefully will learn up about that at a later date. The huge Sentinels being the only visible thing of Marvel after 1 hour was disappointing. It sure looks like the good Marvel stuff must be bought. I wish Marvel Heroes was still around. It has not been the most entertaining hour of gaming, but it has been interesting enough for me to want to try again later.

Grid Autosport No Longer Available

Grid Autosport for PC has gone the way of Grid 2 and Grid. I don’t know whether it is because of licenses expiring or whether they are trying to push sales of the newest Grid game, but Grid (2019) is the only game in the series that is available right now. As good as Grid (2019) is, it is also quite different from Grid, Grid 2 and I dare say (I have not played it) Grid Autosport.

For one, Grid (2019) is missing the Mount Panorama Bathurst track. I don’t know about Grid Autosport, but the Mount Panorama Circuit is awesome in Grid and Grid 2. Grid (2019) is also more focused on traditional racing. The only event types I have seen are race and time attack. No drifting or extreme overtakes here.

Oh well. It’s Grid (2019) or get a different racing franchise.

At the time of writing, it looks like Grid 2 and Grid Autosport are still available from the below shops, but I don’t know how reliable they are. They are also priced at a premium for old games.

Grid 2 is also still available at Fanatical.

Except for Grid 2 Reloaded Edition, it does not look like you can get the DLCs anywhere.

I do wonder if GameSessions will return with my full freebie library which has got Grid Autosport.

Talisman: The Horus Heresy – Final Days

I am late to the party again but…

Talisman: The Horus Heresy leaving Steam on 22nd June

Sad to see that Talisman: The Horus Heresy will be crossing the river Styx to join Grid and Marvel Heroes. At least like Grid, Talisman: The Horus Heresy can still be played once you own the game.

It is a fun digital board game. I only played single-player against the AI, but I still found it good fun. It is not the smartest AI, and sometimes it would do something down right stupid, but I still can only win about 50% of the games.

Having never played Talisman before, I got both Talisman: Digital Edition and Talisman: The Horus Heresy and was hopping between the two. Talisman: Digital Edition is great, but Talisman: The Horus Heresy, well… it’s Warhammer 40,000!

It feels great to take part in the galaxy shattering event that is The Horus Heresy. Where Talisman: Digital Edition feels like the ever changing fantasy mini-RPG, Talisman: The Horus Heresy feels more like a galactic civil war strategy game. Similar mechanics, but feels very different.

The whole relentless fighting across the galaxy atmosphere, is boosted by the great soundtrack composed by Mattias Westlund. He also composed the soundtrack for Talisman: Digital Edition, but his works for Talisman: The Horus Heresy are more impressive in my opinion (Warhammer 40k bias?). Talisman: The Horus Heresy also has the grandest, most awe inspiring, galactic war victory music in all of gaming history! Alright, I got carried away. Out of all the games I have played, it has the best end game music ever. For some strange unknown reason, this end game music is not on the official soundtrack.

As fun as it is, Talisman: The Horus Heresy is marred by a few bugs. I have only encountered one bug, but it cripples the affected character. Fans of Ferrus Manus better stay away from this game. With the game going away for good, it looks like these bugs are here to stay.

Although I don’t play the game online, looking at the online games list never shows anyone playing. So, if you are planning on some multiplayer goodness, make sure you have friends with the game. The developers have said that the online functionality will stay up, but who knows how long that will be for.

If you do decide to get Talisman: The Horus Heresy in these final days, make sure to get the complete bundle. The extras do add good variety to the game. Just don’t expect it to be as large as Talisman: Digital Edition. It is not a game for everyone, but it is a game for those that have a strong desire to say…

MicroProse is Back!

I mean really. They are really back. Have a look at this.

I don’t know if Sid Meier is coming back, but it sounds like “Wild Bill” Stealey is working with them. Old, but maybe still valid news piece:
https://nichegamer.com/2019/02/20/microprose-returns-now-co-publishing-warbirds-2020-flight-simulator/

Bring on F-15 Strike Eagle IV, Gunship 2025, Knights of the Sky The Other Side, Airborne Ranger II.

Bring back the days when EAW meant European Air War instead of Empire at War. I don’t have anything against Empire at War, and I love playing it too, but for the longest time I couldn’t figure out why people wanted to stop playing Star Wars Battlefront II to load up European Air War.

I don’t know how, but bring back Gilman Louie and build Falcon 5 or 6 or whatever number is next. Then release another 1000+ pages phone book binder edition manual that you can whack someone with.

Bring them all back!

Funny how I stumbled on to this. Started out last night, I was thinking of days gone by. Of the times I’ve had and the things that I’ve left behind. This morning saw more sad news about C-19. Then a headline “… Airborne…”. The distracted mind went straight to Airborne Ranger. They really should remake that game. I wonder what happened to MicroProse. Then I found MicroProse is Back!

GameSessions

GameSessions is a digital distribution platform that encourages trying before buying. Their platform allows you to download and play full games for a limited time trial. If you are happy with the games, you can buy Steam keys from them.

The best thing about GameSessions is they seem to have regular game giveaways. Be wary as it is not as simple as getting a DRM-free download or a Steam Key. Here is what you need to know.

A GameSessions giveaway allows you to play a game without a time limit. However, the game is tied to your GameSessions account and it is a GameSessions version of the game.

Being a GameSessions version means two things:
1) Multiplayer systems that uses Steam or other platforms does not work in a GameSessions game.
2) A special game launcher is used to start the game and this launcher requires an “always-on” connection to the GameSessions servers. If the server connection is severed, the game stops. Note, I did manage to play for a couple of minutes after an Internet connection drop-out.

A special installer must downloaded to download the game. The installer cannot resume downloads if it is closed. So, if you need to reboot or the PC crashes, the download will have to start from scratch. The installer can pause and resume downloads if it is kept open.

A GameSessions tray applet/icon/thing loads when Windows boots and there is no option to stop this. If you don’t want it taking up space unnecessarily, you must disable the startup manually in the Task Manager. Regardless of the tray thing, there is always a GameSessions Hub Service that loads. I think this is required for installed games to run. To start a game without the tray icon, just run the shortcut installed on the Desktop or the Start Menu.

When playing a game, sometimes a little message pops-up in the bottom right corner. So far, I have only seen GameSessions messages, but I guess it could display ads too.

When you exit a game, a window pops-up advertising for GameSessions.

Recording videos or taking screen shots may be a problem as GameSessions games crash when utilities like Fraps or Bandicam are running. Luckily, I have not had any problems with GeForce Experience recording video.

If you can tolerate all of the above, then GameSessions makes for another fine way to acquire free games.

Trying out games is not bad either, but it is not all pros and no cons over having a demo version of a game. Some games cannot be trialled properly within the given time limit and some demos are smaller to download. It is still an option though and can be handy.

Fix Act of War to Work on Newer PCs

I use these steps to get  Act of War: Direct Action and High Treason to run on my Windows 7 64 bit PC with 4Gb RAM and a NVIDIA GeForce GT 525m 1Gb VRAM.  The original information for the fixes are in the links at the end.

  1. Install the game as normal.
  2. Install the latest patch.
  3. Download the Proper Windows 7 Fix for Act of War.
  4. copy the d3d9.dll file from the Proper_AoW_proxy.1.zip to the game installation folder.
  5. Download CFF Explorer from here.
  6. Run CFF Explorer and open ActOfWar.exe or ActOfWar_HighTreason.exe in the games’ installation folder.  Make sure to backup those files before modifying.
  7. Select Nt Headers -> File Header on the left column and click on the Click here on the row with Characteristics.
  8. Check the box that says App can handle >2gb address space.   Click OK.  If this box was already checked, then there is nothing to do and you can skip this whole CFF Explorer section.
  9. Save the modified file.
  10. Set the compatibility mode for ActOfWar.exe or ActOfWar_HighTreason.exe to be Windows Vista (Service Pack 1).  Also set the file to run as administrator.
  11. Inside the game installation folder there is a folder EugLoadingBar.  Inside this folder set the file EugLoadingBar.exe to run as administrator and have compatibility mode of  Windows XP (Service Pack 2).

An error message does pop up when starting Direct Action, but when you click OK, the game loads as normal.

Sometimes Direct Action will still crash on start up.   Rebooting the PC seems to fix this nicely.   Annoying but at least I still get to see this:

I needed to get a different version of ActOfWar_HighTreason.exe and fixed it to get the game running.

Thank you to the nice person at Proper Windows 7 Fix for Act of War for making the good fix file for the games.  There are instructions in the zip file too.

Thank you to the nice person at Permenant fix for AOW – High Treason runtime error at start and having to set mem lim for sharing the fix.

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