Started Deep Rock Galactic. Played DRG Survivor recently and had an itch.

So far only solo, to get used to playing first person on the Steam Deck with motion controls, seems fine-ish.

I guess the game really starts to shine with a few friends, so hopefully I can explore it more when my gaming buddies return from vacation next week.

I just started Cult of the Lamb. I’ve tried so many roguelikes and struggled to enjoy them, but this one hits right. It’s not too too hard, and I like the style a lot.

I’ve beaten the first two bishops already, and am working my way towards the third.

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19h

Me and my friends are doing another run of Factorio space age. This time I chose Gleba, and I am actually having a lot of fun. Once you understand how to work with spoilage instead of around it, it gets pretty straightforward. It also helps if you have friends who have set up all the other planets so you can just request all the items that can help you haha.

fleem
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91d

final fantasy 9!

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421h

I’m playing King’s Field: The Ancient City via RetroDeck (I would never have the patience for that game without abusing the save states feature).

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318h

Having played the series back on original hardware, I can confirm it was a nightmare. Save states make old games so much better.

I’ve been playing the original EverQuest (real patient lol) but caved and got Slay the Spire 2 the other day because it’s relatively cheap and seems like a good one. So far I’m really enjoying it and it’s fun to finally be playing a new game that everyone I know is also playing. Usually something comes out and they’re like “what are you playing?!” and my answer is EverQuest 😂

Romkslrqusz
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51d

Picked up all the Splinter Cell games on a sale and started with the first using the EnhancedSC Mod, on Steam Deck. That’s not technically a “Patience” thing as I’m revisiting games from my childhood, but it sure is fun!

My partner and I have also been playing Harold Halibut. The story and visual style are an absolute delight, simpler adventure games are awesome when you’re tired or burnt out! I had my eye on it since it was first announced, it sat on my wishlist waiting for a < $20 sale, and then the GOG version got included “free” via Amazon Prime Gaming. Always nice to have things pan out that way, there have been too many occasions where I bought a game, didn’t get around to playing it, and then it turns up free or “free”.

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51d

Dragon Quest Builders 2, inspired by FOMO over Pokopia.

Also continuing Horizon Zero Dawn for the third time. Just hard mode, but I kinda feel like I could do very hard.

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17h

I just started my first playthrough of Horizon and a few hours in I’m finding it pretty easy on Hard. Does it get harder later, or should I just crank up the difficulty now?

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13h

Honestly, the difficulty curve on HZD feels like a sine wave sometimes.

Cuz:

  • You do simply get stronger over time
  • You also improve your use of tactics over time
  • You also gain access to new tactics
  • But they introduce much stronger machines too
  • But a lot of a machine’s strength can be mitigated by approaching it with the right tactics
  • But they also deliberately put you in situations where you can’t use the easy tactics
  • But they also put you in situations where you can use the easy tactics, against a ton of very strong machines

So depending on how quickly you hit the skill ceiling on using your available tactics, how much you like to grind, how reliable your multi-tasking is, and your basic “twitch skills”, you might get a skewed perspective at any point along the way.

I don’t think there’s any harm in changing the difficulty back and forth (not sure). So maybe just go with whatever feels comfy at the moment?

Edit: I’ll say, overall, they do an excellent job of making you feel like the stuff that used to be scary is no longer scary, but for the right reasons. That is: not because of dmg++ and armor++ buffs (although there is some of that), but because you’ve become so much more proficient at handling dangerous situations. For the most part, even mid-to-late game, the simple stuff is still deadly if you let your guard down.

I’ve been away from my PC for a couple months, and I finished Fallout season 2 while I was away and it got me in the mood for some balls-deep Fallout playing. I can’t decide whether I want to play 3, NV, 4, or actually play through the first three games because I never have.

Fallout 1 and 2 were rough for me, I never really got through them. I have read that Fallout 2 really defines what the series is so I’ve been wanting to revisit it. Start out with 1! Don’t forget to hit save constantly.

Coelacanth
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11d

Where did you quit in Fallout 2? I love it but the opening hours are pretty rough, even fans of it meme about the temple of trials and the general first few hours.

I do definitely think you’re right that FO2 defined the franchise, it’s where they moved from a slightly more grim and serious post-apocalyptic tone in the first game to a more humourous style with more pop culture references and wacky stuff. Fans or the first two games tend to be divided over that, with some saying Fallout 1 is superior because of the different tone. I can see the argument, but I love Fallout 2 personally.

There are some great mods for it too, not just Restoration Project Updated but Talking Heads and Talking Heads Actually Talk are both incredible fan made mods that blend right in.

Romkslrqusz
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31d

3 and NV via Tale of Two Wastelands

JakoJakoJako13
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111d

Good old Quake.

Pholous
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6h

I just finished my first Xcom2-campaign and had a lot of fun. After that I bought Slay the Spire 2, as it seems pretty similar to StS 1 - which is one of the best games I have ever played. This time with multiplayer!

I wasn’t patient this time around, so it’s Slay the Spire 2, early access.

It runs really well on my two core third gen ryzen laptop, and I will gladly recommend it to anyone who likes deckbuilders.

Wall Street Raider, there’s a great solo dev working on moving the codebase to a modern framework, but the original still slaps.

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1d

Someone posted a great article about that game a while back. Was that what got you to try it?

How long does it take before everything clicks and you can play smoothly instead of constantly stopping to look things up? The core concept of a realistic investment simulator looks fun, but needing to know and follow all of the real life laws and regulatory minutia from decades ago sounds like a nightmare for a new player.

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4h

Uh i been playing since the 90s on DOS lol. I was a bored kid who loved reading the financial section of the newspaper.

You don’t really need to know the laws. the game just tells you you can’t do that if you try to do something like make a merger monopoly. There are tax considerations that can be tricky but I mostly ignore those. You get taxed on profits so you dont need to min max taxes to be successful in the game.

Uhh and yeah im constantly doing research and looking things up in the game, which i mean that’s really what investing is IMHO. It’s essentially a textbased game, you have to read a lot, even if it’s mostly numbers/percentages. The modern rework on steam has a much prettier layout and more charts graphs.

I said it before but I man, the duel races in Ridge Racer 2 (PSP) are the most miserable experience I ever had playing a racing game - they are WAY over tuned. I really feel like there’s a middle ground between smoking the competition on lap 1 and spending most of the race watching your opponent at the edge of game’s draw distance due to them using a car which is faster, has better acceleration and starts the race with a boost. I like a good challenge but this ain’t it.

I finished the three duels required to unlock the EX tour series of events and that’s that, I’m not touching the remaining 4. Ever. I don’t need a 100% completion rate, not when some of the remaining content sucks the fun out of the whole experience. I’d rather have fun with the normal races instead and I’m extremely happy the EX series exist - I was actually worried I already cleared (almost) everything with the ending movie and credits unlocking halfway through PRO tour. I’m glad I was wrong.

Still love the game but boy was that rough at times.

Outer Wilds

Do you want an open-world space puzzler where nothing is stopping you from beating the whole game in 20 minutes except the fact that you don’t have the knowledge needed to do it? No unlocks, progression is all based on learning new info. 20+ hours of exploring a miniature solar system to find an extremely satisfying end where you get everything to align.

Pick it up and don’t look anything up.

The DLC is also great. A puzzle to even start it! Also don’t look up anything. It’s best going in blind outside of the fact that it’s an excellent game.

Patient Gamers
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A gaming community free from the hype and oversaturation of current releases, catering to gamers who wait at least 12 months after release to play a game. Whether it’s price, waiting for bugs/issues to be patched, DLC to be released, don’t meet the system requirements, or just haven’t had the time to keep up with the latest releases.

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