O tempora: Syberia I & II

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

Twenty years ago in 2002 when Syberia was released, the point and click adventures were on a decline. It wasn’t like the genre didn’t have any recent fantastic examples, The Longest Journey being from a few years before. But otherwise, it felt as if nobody really knew at the time what to do with the genre and how to approach it. And to be absolutely frank, Syberia itself oftentimes felt like it didn’t really know how to approach the genre either, yet it so elegantly stumbled through its beautiful locations with its wonderful magic realist story that it pretty soon became a critical darling at least in some circles. And also started a short, but pretty decent run of adventure titles made by Microïds that ended around the time of the Sinking Island.

While I have played both Syberia and its sequel when they were new, and did enjoy them (the original more than the second game), I haven’t replayed them ever since until now.

Read more“O tempora: Syberia I & II”

O tempora: Final Fantasy IV (Pixel Remaster)

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

Final Fantasy IV has not been the first Final Fantasy I played. But it is the only title in the franchise so far that I’ve played more than twice. In fact, this Pixel Remaster playthrough has been the… fourth playthrough, I believe. As I’ve previously played through the original “Final Fantasy II” release, the unofficial translation of FFIV, the Final Fantasy Chronicles release on PS1 and the Final Fantasy IV Advance version on the GBA. I’ve also attempted to play the 3D remake for DS, but extremely disliked the visual style and changes to the game. Hence, why I was so excited about the Pixel Remaster version coming – hopefully the “ultimate” remaster of the original version of the game, available for generations to come. And this version is pretty much exactly that.

Read more“O tempora: Final Fantasy IV (Pixel Remaster)”

O tempora: Final Fantasy III (Pixel Remaster)

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

Of the three NES Final Fantasy titles that I tried playing years ago, FF3 was the one that get me hooked. I still dropped it at around a quarter of the story in, but I was planning to return someday. I even gave the 3D Remake version of the game a chance, even though I really disliked the style and approach to those DS Remakes. But it wasn’t until now that I’ve finally finished Final Fantasy III. And I really liked it.

Read more“O tempora: Final Fantasy III (Pixel Remaster)”

O tempora: Final Fantasy II (Pixel Remaster)

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

While my attempts to play the original Final Fantasy usually failed because of how hard and outdated it was, while also having a really simple story, Final Fantasy II in addition to the difficulty and chunkiness was also really weird. All of my attempts quickly hit a wall and every time I’ve tried to check on some guides to help me start, I’d read about some bizarre but seemingly necessary tricks where you’d grind for a few hours by hitting your own party members. With the Pixel Remaster version I was finally able to give the game a proper look and appreciate what it tried to be. Even though it still has some questionable decisions.

Read more“O tempora: Final Fantasy II (Pixel Remaster)”

O tempora: Castlevania Advance Collection

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

Well, this was unexpected. After spending years locked to Game Boy Advance, a console that most people nowadays probably don’t have or use anymore, Konami has decided to release the Castlevania entries made for that console for modern platforms and most importantly PC. Oh and the SNES port of Rondo of Blood as well, for some reason. Unfortunately, this isn’t some extremely complicated NightDive Studios remaster or what Square Enix did with the Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster collection. This is just a collection of original game ROMs, wrapped in a nice emulation package with a few extras thrown in. Luckily, it’s a well made collection and playing these titles is a joy.

Read more“O tempora: Castlevania Advance Collection”

O tempora: Final Fantasy (Pixel Remaster)

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

How many times have I tried to play the original Final Fantasy… I’ve tried the original NES game, the Final Fantasy Origins version on PS1, Dawn of Souls on GBA… But I’ve never actually finished it until the Pixel Remaster release. It’s strange to finally play the very first game in such a huge and influential franchise to completion. And it’s especially strange to realize that despite being so quaint by modern standards, even with so many improvements Pixel Remaster version brings, there’s still a place for a title like this.

Read more“O tempora: Final Fantasy (Pixel Remaster)”

Happy about: Fable Anniversary

Many many years ago, in 2005 to be precise, I’ve played Fable: The Lost Chapters on PC and enjoyed it quite a bit. It didn’t exactly wow me, because of how intentionally primitive the storytelling was, but it was full of curious ideas. And from what I’ve seen and heard, all those ideas were developed and expanded upon in the highly praised sequel that still remains exclusive to Xbox 360 and thus, I’ve never given it a proper playthrough. I’ve not checked Fable III either, since the PC port of that game wasn’t particularly great and was tied into the terrible GFWL service, which was apparently the main reason the game was pulled from sales pretty soon after and remains not available for PC since then.

In 2014 an Unreal Engine 3 driven remake/remaster was released, called Fable Anniversary, which was basically exactly the same game as The Lost Chapters, but with many little tweaks and changes and with better support for modern hardware. And for the longest time I’ve not planned to ever play it. I thought that I will find Fable too simplistic and boring and not worth revisiting. Yet a discussion with friends prompted me to reconsider and give this game a go. I’m glad I did that.

Read more“Happy about: Fable Anniversary”

O tempora: Tomb Raider: Anniversary

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

I’ve already revisited Tomb Raider: Anniversary several times before. In fact, it’s been one of my favorite entries in the series, up there with The Last Revelation. But it’s been a while and the game has never been perfect in the first place. I was somewhat worried that it has aged more poorly than I’d expect.

Nah, it’s still great.

Read more“O tempora: Tomb Raider: Anniversary”

O tempora: Batman: Arkham Asylum

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

It’s been quite a while since I’ve revisited Batman: Arkham Asylum. A really curious mix of a beat ’em up and stealthy action adventuring inside a metroidvania-ish map it instantly became one of my favorite games and even though I’ve admired the later entries in the series as well, none of them came close to being as fun as this first one. I’m happy to say that almost 12 years later it remains wonderful.

Read more“O tempora: Batman: Arkham Asylum”

O tempora: BloodRayne: Terminal Cut

O tempora is a series of retrospective posts where I play games from ages before to see if they stood the test of time.

While third person shooters were a thing throughout the 90s, it wasn’t until Max Payne in 2001 when the genre suddenly clicked. It had all of the speed and energy of a late 90s FPS’, but didn’t feel like a bizarre third person mod to one and had its controls and animations tweaked to feel great. Many games followed using a similar formula. PC-centric ones, like Max Payne itself, kept it all really fast and mouse controlled. Console-centric ones tried to adapt the speed and agility to the controller. Many failed to be fun or memorable. BloodRayne, originally from 2002, was one of the fun ones.

Read more“O tempora: BloodRayne: Terminal Cut”