Penny Arcade Adventures To Appear On PS3
Relin writes "Penny Arcade Adventures: On the Rain-slick Precipice of Darkness: Episode One started its run on the Xbox Live Arcade, and shortly after making its way to Steam, the development team at Hothead Games announced that it had begun work on a PS3 version of the game."
I really can't get over the fact that they are creating a PS3 version of a game that is already available for Linux. But which I mean, ports usually go Console - Windows - Mac (if you are lucky); going the other way seems like bizzaroworld. But then I guess that fits with the entire Penny Arcade franchise.
The Long Now Foundation
I bought the game on Steam. I was a little underwhelmed by the gameplay. The combat system, for example, is almost exactly like Super Mario RPG -- from 1996 -- except it's kind of in real-time. A lot of waiting to click, and guessing when to hit the space-bar to block an attack. Then again, I'm not a follower of the comic, so I guess a lot of the other selling points of the game (i.e., the in-jokes) were lost on me.
Gabe and Tycho, beware the dark side. Once you go down the path to Sony, forever will it dominate your destiny. Consume you it will!
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Where the hell is the Wii version? I was pretty sure these Penny Arcade guys liked money. Lots and lots of money.
The game borrows much in the way of mechanics from old standards. You run around picking up items that light up when you mouse over them. You pick from mostly unimportant dialog choices. Combat is mostly an action-point turn-based system in the Final Fantasy style. Despite all this, the game is evolutionary in many ways: 1) The writing and concept is funny as hell. If you don't find this evolutionary, what games have you played recently? 2) Action-point turn-based combat with decent options and quite a bit of twitch. 3) It is episodic in nature. $20 buys you 6+ hours of entertainment. 4) Cross platform release with simple options for all platform owners. 5) You get to kill hundreds of hobos and mimes. Nuff said. If you haven't checked it out and have some time to spare, pick up the demo for free and you'll probably drop the $20 afterwards like I did.
So they're porting their game to a Blu-Ray player? What next, my home theater receiver?
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
I think it's a fair trade. Xbox 360 gets Final Fantasy XIII, and the PS3 gets Penny Arcade.
I have nothing compelling to say
And the Wii gets no love.
Nuff said!
I'd argue that Bioshock is more compelling than the next installment of Final Fantasy, the way the series and its spinoffs have been going. Square is starting to Disney the hell out of Final Fantasy.
Twinstiq, game news
Penny arcade reminds me of lasagna.
"I drank what?" - Socrates
Loved it on Xbox 360, hopefully there is new content on ps3
What's next? The Cardboard Tube Samurai switching to steel?
The Steam version, which was released later, got achievements. The people who bought it on release day got stuck with a game missing features, and were told by Greenhouse staff to suck it up. See this thread:
http://forum.playgreenhouse.com/jforum/posts/list/720.page
I know I will only be getting the next episode on Steam, since I know that the other versions are crippled.
The Steam version, which was released later, got achievements. The people who bought it on release day got stuck with a game missing features, [...]
No, the people who got it on steam got a game with added/tacked-on features, there's an important difference. The fact that they decided to give more after the fact doesn't mean you got cheated.
Mr. Period: Nine is the one that's right by ten!
Nine: One day I will kill him. Then, I will be Ten.
I was terrified that they'd give them voices. I was actually quite relieved to discover that they never did.
It's based on a comic. You shouldn't hear their voices. You've presumably already got an idea of how they sound in your mind. So, no, they never do have any voice acting in the full version, thankfully.
Don't you think that seems a bit closed-minded? I mean we've been down this road a million times before - characters which started out as comics suddenly having voices in animation or TV shows or whatever. Superman, Dragonball, Naruto, Ninja Turtles, X-Men, Harry Potter, Charlie Brown, Garfield, whatever, take your pick...
The point is, yes, people can find cause to complain about voices put on characters when they're used to them not having any - but that doesn't mean that putting a voice on that character and making it work is impossible, or that the results can't be good. It just means that in this case, they didn't bother trying.
Bow-ties are cool.