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Monthly Archives: January 2017
Clash-A-Rama! The Series: Goblin’s Eleven
Another animated feature from the Clash-a-Rama team: Goblin’s Eleven!
Dungeon Hunter 5 – Update 15 Trailer
Time to celebrate the Lunar Festival in Dungeon Hunter 5! Don’t miss out!
Arpiel – Hanna Trailer [Korean]
Turns out Arpiel Online isn’t gone yet! Today we have a trailer for a character, Hanna!
Stinkeye – Hero Overview | Orcs Must Die! Unchained
We have another Hero Overview from Orcs Must Die! Unchained this week! This time it’s Stinkeye!
Dirty Bomb: Where’s Dockyard?
Where’s Dockyard in Dirty Bomb? Maybe today we get an update!
Year of the Emperor | Lunar Revel 2017 Skins Trailer – League of Legends
Time to honor the greatest of heroes, with new skins of course! This occurs during the Lunar Revel in League of Legends.
Lunar Revel 2017 Crafting | Intro Video – League of Legends
Want to know how crafting works in the 2017 Lunar Revel? Of course! League of Legends has it right here!
Yugioh: Duel Links – Smaller Scale, But Enjoyable
So, I’m more of a Magic: the Gathering player, but I’ve still spent my time playing Yugioh. I’ve spent a lot of time playing it, actually, and so I’m pretty familiar with the early sets in the game. I think I stopped playing three or four expansions in. So when I saw a new Yugioh game on mobile as I was randomly browsing, I decided to give it a go. You start off by picking Yami Yugi or Seto Kaiba, and use a deck styled after theirs. So Blue Eyes White Dragon or Dark Magician, et cetera. You can unlock the other characters later, from what I understand. They give you an absolute ton of gems to celebrate people playing the game, which is standard for these style games. If you’re even remotely interested, I recommend picking it up, downloading it and getting your gems. I have about 1700 gems, and that’s not from being press. Packs are three cards, for 50 gems. So, that’s something to think about. And 10 packs for 500 gems. It looks like most of the expansions in game are fairly recent, and yes, Kaiba’s deck has access to Blue Eyes White Dragon.
However, it’s a faster paced, shorter dueling system. You have half the life points as usual, and only three summons on the table at once I believe. You can play traps, spells, special/tribute summon, and is pretty true to the actual game. It’s just on a smaller scale, so I guess I can see why hardcore Yugioh fans might not be happy with it. I don’t know every rule but it feels right to me, and it’s enjoyable. You can customize your decks, play with decks inspired by other characters in the anime, but. . . it is a serious drain on the battery. There is a battery saver setting, but still, I’d only consider playing it at home, while plugged in. All told, I really enjoy this game as a mobile Yugioh/card game just in general. It’s pretty high quality, the cards are true to the series, as is the setting. Your goal is to become King of the Duel Links World, so you better hop to and get ready for it!
Durango Beta Preview: The Dinosaur Sandbox Set to Dominate Mobile
by : Ojogo
Durango is an upcoming free-to-play survival MMORPG from Nexon and What! Studio. It’s a game where your character is transported to a different world named after the game title where dinosaurs still roam the world. Your task from then on is to survive in this harsh world using the materials you can get from the land, cast away style, and eventually create your own little world as you progress and learn more.
Gameplay
You are transported into a tropical world called Durango as your character experiences scenes that feel taken right out of the Korean zombie movie, Train to Busan. But instead of zombies, you get dinosaurs attacking your train. Once you reach your destination in Durango, you need to survive by crafting whatever you can out of whatever you can find safely. You need to harvest food, craft materials and tools and even hunt dinosaurs for not only sustenance, but also clothes and weapons.
Durango utilizes a lot of gameplay systems that are made famous by survival games such as H1Z1 and Don’t Starve or its multiplayer version, Don’t Starve Together. To those who aren’t familiar with the mentioned titles, this means the game requires you to farm these various resources to play and thrive in game. After settling down in a location that you decide as your home, you would then need to explore your home island, and the other subsequent islands that are opened to you to gather more resources and, at the same time, create communities.
What’s really awesome and surprising though in Durango is that this is the first time I’ve experienced a mobile survival game that let me immerse myself in a similar manner as the PC survival games I’ve previously played. What’s more is that, unlike some titles, I actually meet up and even interact with people playing at the same time as me.
One of the really awesome elements in Durango is the skill tree system that you are introduced into earlier on the game. Depending on the chosen character you have, you will be given a specific boost in one of the skill trees that is integral in game. While the specialization does help out at the beginning of the experience, you can just as easily switch specializations further down the road depending on what kind of gameplay you’d like to have. What if you decided to start as an engineer, but once experience the game realized the role of hunter was a better fit? Then just invest time in hunting low leveled dinosaurs and go through the motions of learning to hunt, kill and slaughter said dinosaurs and you’ll effectively change your class in no time.
One of the things I really loved with my experience in Durango is the way your character growth feels organic. The game allows you to grow into the gameplay preference you have in the world instead of forcing you to just follow through a predetermined set of prerequisites to become a certain class. Though this changes as you discover the radio school system, where you would have to go through the hoops of accomplishing tasks to learn a specific skill set. But, you still have the option to opt out of it midway without the loss of any of the skills your character learned along the way.
The game plays out like a truly sandbox title which is still unheard of on the mobile platform, and it’s such a great and immersive experience that I never actually expected from a mobile title till today.
Unique Gameplay Elements
I really liked the concept that instead of the already overused zombie apocalypse as the background of the game, Nexon decided to play on the idea that your character lives in a world where dinosaurs exist. This is not only a refreshing theme, but it also opens yourself up into a world that’s rarely explored in video games up until recently.
I’ve had it with the zombie apocalypse and zombies in general, and I know I’m not alone. That’s why Durango is such a breath of fresh air. There’s a reason the zombie survival titles are literally going the way of the dinosaur while ARK continues to thrive after all.
Another unique gameplay feature that’s a first for me is the way craters and unstable land allow you to explore and communicate with NPCs and other players. Craters act as warp points so players can quickly travel between lands and in-game areas to meet up with others.
Freedom of Choice
I’d like to emphasize a bit more on the game’s freedom of choice to be involved in the game’s overall narrative and the larger in-game world/community. While you can be that one guy who’s the village hermit, living off the land on your own, you can also opt to become a bit more involved in the community/area you decide to live on. However, to be truly involved in the community around you, you need to at least have a bit more experience under your belt to offer skills in exchange for their help. Getting involved in the game’s narrative or community doesn’t take you out of the experience, but instead is a natural part of the gameplay experience, if you let it happen.
This amount of freedom is unprecedented in a mobile title and this is why I loved my Durango experience more.
Tedious Farming
There is one hitch for those who would want to get into the game however. Since Durango is a world that requires you to live off the land, the process of farming materials is unavoidable. This is a tedious and mind-numbing unskippable gameplay process which can turn off a lot of players. But if you’re the kind of person who finds games like Minecraft or Terraria to be a fun engaging experience, then Durango won’t feel any worse than what you have experienced before.
Critique
On all accounts Durango hits my checklist of requirements to be an amazing mobile game. It’s immersive, allows more freedom for the players compared to the usual mobile game trash you have on the market, and looks beautiful all the while.
There are still a few kinks with the system though, and one example that I’ve experienced is the way the perspective transitions that sometimes muddles up the view. But that’s just a minor problem that can be fixed as the game is still in its limited beta stage. I’m excited to experience the game once it goes full-force and people are just swarming into Durango to get their own dinosaur world experience in-game.
State of the Beta: Excellent
Durango is a title that’s surprisingly immersive for a mobile game. It’s a must download for anyone who would want to have their eyes glued on their mobile phones. It’s a timesink that’s only limitation is the world that it’s hedged itself into. But it’s a refreshing experience nonetheless. If you’re going to go all in on your phone for an MMO experience, Durango is the top tier choice.









