flamebyrd: (Default)
Things have been pretty rough recently for various reasons, so I'm going to distract myself from all that by talking about a few things which have been bringing me joy.

Animal Crossing: New Horizons 2.0
A couple of months ago I decided to do a bit of date manipulation to finish off the art collection (by resetting the same day over and over) so I could finish my museum and maybe quit the game. I accomplished this, and Nintendo promptly announced a huge update with thousands of new items and new things to do every day. So I'm back on that horse and loving it again.

I've updated my dream at DA-4989-3336-9453. It's been raining so once again there are flowers everywhere, and I've rearranged a few things so all my spare flowers are hanging out on the beach. Which is to say, if you need flowers, please let me know! New things since last time are a new entrance with two bridges, a farm area, the beginnings of a treehouse, and a redesigned museum garden. Also, the clock room is getting out of control.

I also spent way too much money on packs of the new Amiibo cards so if anybody wants to trade doubles, I'm in!

Speedrunning
Pokemon: Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl, Nintendo Switch remakes of the 2006 Nintendo DS games, were released the other day. I mention this not because I'm playing them (I'm not), but because the speedrunners have discovered a ton of new glitches and strategies to go fast, and I'm loving watching how excited they are to find them. So far this includes:
- If you turn the music off, the game skips all the level up and healing jingles and it shaves minutes off the run.
- If you hatch an egg in front of a particular NPC he will no longer block you from proceeding to Sunyshore City while it is experiencing a blackout
- If you use surf immediately after fighting a trainer near the water, you can float over the terrain (or under it) and progress the story in unintended ways, including by skipping Victory Road completely

It's still early days and they're still trying to figure out what categories and rules to formalise on the leaderboards, not to mention the risk that any of these glitches could be patched at any time, but it's the discovery process that's bringing me joy anyway.

Mini Metro (iOS)
Friendship ended with desktop PC version, now mobile version is my best friend. I'm not going to say I'm good at it, but I also haven't linked it to any social media, which means it won't show the global leaderboards, so I have no idea! I'm finding I get the most joy by coming up with my own challenges, usually "only use the 3 lines it starts with".

Unpacking (PC/Switch/Xbox)
This is a very fun, short puzzle game about unpacking a person's boxes into various dwellings over their lifetime. It has a wonderfully subtle type of storytelling, as you get to know the person through their belongings, what changes and what goes with them from house to house, along with the decisions you have to make about where to put their belongings in each house. Very cute pixel art, some of it very nostalgic. It's short for how expensive it is, but I really enjoyed it. Since I finished the main story, I'm just achievement-hunting now.
flamebyrd: A witch and a bard. The bard is saying "Is the world really ending??" (apocalypse)
Summer Games Done Quick is on right now, raising money for Médecins Sans Frontières|Doctors Without Borders!

I'll probably do a highlights list once it's over, but I wanted to call out this run now specifically because it's so unusual and clever:
Paper Mario "Stop 'n Swop" by JCog in 26:12.

If you've watched that and are confused, I don't blame you in the least, and offer these additional resources:
Pastebin by JCog attempting to explain it
A YouTube video explaining in detail how this trick was discovered (this was what I was really interested in)
The runner's Reddit AMA
flamebyrd: (Default)
My physical and mental health have been teaming up to put me in a downward spiral of despondency recently, so I'm glad Summer Games Done Quick 2020 is running right now to provide some distraction.

If you're not familiar: Games Done Quick runs charity marathons of speedrunning (which is finishing a computer game as quickly as possible). It's a great way to find out more about speedrunning because all runs are commentated with the assumption that many people are unfamiliar with the game and/or the speedrun. This particular marathon supports Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders and is online-only, for obvious reasons.

I'll be keeping it on the TV while I study/browse the internet this week. If you're watching, feel free to recommend runs to me! I don't have anything in particular I'm hanging out for this time around.
flamebyrd: (Default)
I spent most of last week with the TV set to AGDQ. I enjoyed 90% of what I watched, the energy of the event is great. There's a fair amount of audience participation and memes, which some people think is beating a dead horse but I think is wonderful. Counting down to $3M raised towards the end was fantastic.

If you're at all interested in learning what speedrunning is, GDQ runs are a great place to start because there is commentary, usually geared towards people unfamiliar with the game or the run. They do their best to explain what they're doing and, if they can, why it works.

Some speedruns are just practicing the game a lot so that you can beat it really quickly. A lot of them also involve exploiting oversights in the game environment to clip through barriers and move ahead to other parts of the game. In 3D games this means they end up the dead spaces that exist behind the walls, which I find very visually challenging. These kinds of tricks also involve a lot of practice. I generally prefer watching the former kind, but the latter can also be fun!

There may be a part 2 to this once I catch up on some runs I missed. The archive of runs from this AGDQ can be found on GDQ Vods here.

Cut for length. Links to runs I enjoyed below. )

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 28th, 2025 02:08 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios