Risen to the Challenge

by Scarlett on November 5, 2009 · View Comments

in: Girl Gone Gaming

Like all discerning RPG’ers, I’m constantly on the lookout for a quality PC gaming experience that meets my (rather non-demanding) wish list:

- Engaging storyline
- Intuitive combat
- Clever use of NPCs
- Impressive (but not overly graphics-intensive) scenery
- At least 20 hours of gameplay

Beyond that, I’m a pretty flexible fox. I don’t limit myself to games set in specific time periods, or make a big fuss over first-person vs third-person. I’m not all nitpicky about bugs or glitches, so long as the FPS is decent and crashing is kept to a minimum. But I do have two rather specific qualifiers that eliminate a surprising number of RPGs from the “must play list”:

I don’t do MMORPGs (or any multi-player, for that matter), and I’m not down with games that are party-based.

I know, I know – but when it comes to gaming, I’m a solo adventuress who doesn’t appreciate other people gettin’ all up in my grill. If I feel like casting Invisibility in Arx Fatalis and systematically wiping out an entire town, I’m gonna do it! If I’m keen on finishing every damn side adventure before I even bother with the main quest line in Oblivion, I’m gonna do it! So when I heard about a new RPG that fit everything on the wishlist and was prime for some quality hack n’ slash action, I couldn’t wait to get my hands on it. Enter Risen!

Risen
Is that a lighthouse in your pants, or are you just happy to see me?

Risen centers on a nameless, shipwrecked hero who lands on a volcanic island where mysterious mayhem has been taking place; namely, the “rising” of ancient temples from within the earth that bring along scary beasts and a widespread panic. The game is divided into 4 chapters and offers a decent amount of replayability, in that quests and options will change depending on whether you side with Don Esteban (the bad-ass leader of the bandit camp), or the mysterious and powerful Inquisitor. I chose the former path (hunters n’ fighters over pansy mages any day!) and I enjoyed the game thoroughly.

Scarlett Says …

* Risen is a third-person RPG that is widely compared to Gothic 3, in terms of both the overall look and the gameplay. If you enjoyed the Gothic series, it’s a good bet you’ll like this title as well.

* You’ll gain plenty of experience points by completing quests, particularly in Chapter 1, which is by far the longest. If this game has a weakness, it would be in your initial quests, which some players may find tedious in that they’re largely of the “go here, fetch this, come back” variety. As someone who actually enjoys these types of missions – since they offer plenty of opportunity for exploration – I didn’t find them weary at all. Speaking of exploring, the game is also very intuitive in that it recognizes when you stumble onto a quest that you haven’t actually triggered (killing a certain number of beasts, or finding a rare weapon), and will fully reward you all experience points and mark it as “Complete” – even if you’re never assigned the task to begin with.

* When it comes to Leveling, you’ll receive 10 “Learning Points” upon each successful level, which you can spend on skills ranging from weapons, character enhancements, or combat improvements. I would recommend ignoring most of the weapon skills and focusing only on Blade or Ax, and Crossbow. Regular archery and staff fighting are much less effective, as the strongest available weapons in these categories still pale in comparison to the best blades and crossbows. Also, some Ax Fighting skill will come in handy in the final battle …

* Not sure how to spend your points? Character enhancements are cheaper to level than Weapons skills, costing only 5 points each – which means you can increase two per level. Likewise, you can allocate as little as 1 point at a time to Strength, Dexterity and Mana – which means you’ll always have an opportunity to use any odd numbered points you may have left over. Some enhancement skills – such as Pick Pocketing, Lock Picking, Alchemy and Smithing – have multiple levels, so they’ll require 15 points to level up in full. Others (Sneak, Acrobatics, Mining) only require 5 points apiece. Here are my recommendations:

  • Level up Sneak, Alchemy and Lock Picking early on. The first will help you in robbing people, literally behind their backs. Alchemy will allow you to turn easily-accessible healing plants into basic potions, which you will be using a lot of in this game. And although many of the randomly located chests will open at will, you’ll come across quite a few that require lock picking skills – and they often contain mountains of gold, potions, rings/amulets, and other useful items.
Risen
I was a looting and gathering fool, and yet never once used up all my allocated space. Huzzah for unlimited inventories!
  • Blades are the easiest to get your hands on, and the one-handed varieties allow you to use shields, so I would recommend increasing Blade to at least Level 2, and the same for Crossbow. You’ll occasionally come across jewelry items that will increase your weapons skills, as well as weapons that also give you a skill boost just by equipping them.
  • Pick Pocketing can be somewhat profitable, and you may need it to complete a quest or two, but it’s much less useful than Lock Picking. Mining will allow you to collect gold, iron ore and obsidian (useful for Smithing) – but those are mostly found in caves, which you’ll want to avoid until you have better weapons and higher combat skills, as they’re usually populated with tougher enemies. Acrobatics only serves to help prevent damage when you fall, and can only be trained by one person, so don’t bother with that one until much later on.

* Combat is tricky, and requires the use of the directional keys as well as blocking and parrying to be successful. Enemies do not level with your character, but you’ll want to steer clear of the larger beasts until you’ve leveled your Strength and weapons skills several times. If you come across Trolls, Ashbeasts, or Goblins – RUN!

Risen
I hope you remembered to quick save!

* Oh, and you will die in this game. A LOT. I can honestly say that I’ve never used the Quick Save option as much in any other RPG, but I found the challenge to be enjoyable, rather than frustrating. Although there was that time in Chapter 1 that I got the “clever” idea to clear out a gang of the Inquisitor’s men all by myself, with only a low level sword and no armor. It took me about an hour of luring them away one by one with my crossbow, and then pummeling them with my rusty blade while trying desperately not to be killed by their superior skills. Then I found out that if I’d just waited, I would have been given a quest where I’d have been given a group of fighters to storm into combat with. Oops!

On the Other Hand …

* While you’ll be given basic region maps in your Journal, there’s no mini-map to speak of, and the compass is largely useless. I got lost fairly frequently, and I’d routinely come across caves that I wanted to explore but didn’t yet have the skill set to handle – and had it not been for a lot of aimless wandering later on, I’d have never found them again.

* Merchants SUCK in Risen. There’s no option to increase your bartering skills, so expect to only be offered 25% (or less) of the stated value of the items you pick up. This means that it behooves you to pick up EVERYTHING that isn’t bolted down. Thanks to looting, selling, and quests that offer gold rewards, you can eventually amass a nice cache of gold, but hang onto it, because:

* Decent armor is almost impossible to come by outside of finishing major quests, and even then, you’re expected to pay for it. For example, if you choose to side with Don and the bandit camp, he’ll offer you increasingly better armor as you complete his quests – but if you don’t have the gold in hand, you’re out of luck. I believe the best armor in the game (outside of what you get just before the game ends) cost 5000 gold, which was about 2/3rds of my stash at the time. You’ll have a much easier time with weapons, which (outside of buying them), you can gain by knocking out or killing people, looting chests, and you can even forge them yourself with the Smithing and Mining skills.

* There are a few noticeable bugs and glitches, particularly in Chapter 3, where drawing your sword at one point leads to a crash. I was able to get past it upon reloading, but frequent saving (which you’ll want to do anyway, thanks to tricky combat) is recommended. You’ll also likely run into incidents where NPCs who were friendly or neutral to you earlier on will attack you at first sight – and some of these characters cannot be killed, which means running away is your only escape. Thankfully most enemies will only chase you so far, but if they persist, your best bet is to get them to follow you into an area where friendly NPCs will fight on your behalf.

* Being a German title probably contributes to some of the inconsistencies in the voice overs and the subtitles. While the voice acting itself is strong, you might be scratching your head when you’re told to locate a character whose name is different than the one given, or the spoken words are completely different from the captions. It’s nothing quest-shattering though.

* At the time of this writing, there’s a notable lack of game help available online, and with a manual as sparse and unhelpful as the one that accompanies this game, you’ll likely find yourself well and truly stuck more than once. The only saving grace I found was Gamespot’s forum, with its pain-in-the-ass search feature which is largely useless. If you desperately need a nudge in the right direction, I recommend going to Google and typing “site:gamespot.com +risen +quest” – just substitute “quest” for whatever you’re having trouble with.

Overall …

Risen offers around 50 hours of gameplay (I did a lot of exploring and finished all of the side quests) and ran smoothly on my somewhat older system (Windows XP, 2.01 GHz processor, 2GB of RAM, budget ATI graphics card). I’ll probably replay it at some point so I can experience the Inquisitor-specific quests, but those only really affect the first two chapters, so the second half of the game will likely be identical. It definitely quenched my thirst for a high quality, engaging, challenging, and enjoyable RPG. Risen is right up there with Prototype as being my favorite game of the year, by far!

Risen
One thing’s for sure … This game definitely isn’t boar-ing! =D

{ 41 comments }

Nintend’ho

by Scarlett on November 2, 2009 · View Comments

in: Girl Gone Gaming

For all my “PC Gamerz R Teh RULEZ!1!11!!!1″ style posts on TSE, I have a confession to make. Deep within the caverns of my heart, I still have a burning affection for Nintendo. But not the Super Nintendo, GameCube, DS – none of that nonsense. I’m talking the hardcore, old school Nintendo Entertainment System. That shoddy hunk of plastic that caused many fits of rage with its random resets and crashing – the one that my brother and I used increasingly inventive substances and implements to “clean” – all for the hope of having 5 more uninterrupted minutes of Super Mario 3 or Fester’s Quest. I loved and loathed that thing in equal measure, and although my brother eventually graduated to a Playstation, I never quite took to it, preferring the comfortable familiarity of the pixelated frustration of Paperboy or flexing my poker prowess with Casino Kid. It wasn’t until we finally got a home computer in 1999 that I abandoned console gaming forever in favor of the PC.

It was like rediscovering my roots, man! After all, I was the dweeby kid who eschewed kindergarten recess in favor of playing Oregon Trail on the Apple IIe, even if I was constantly suffering a premature death.

You Have Cholera

For my second go-round with PC gaming, I started out on Adventure games (with the Gabriel Knight series still anchored atop my “Favorite Games of All Time” list), and eventually I graduated to RTS and RPG titles. And in the 10 years now that I’ve exclusively been a PC gamer, I’ve had nary an itch or an urge to try consoles again. And then, goddammit, the caressing whisper of Satoru Iwata got all up in my business and made me start jonesing for a Wii. (In reality, it was probably those incessant television commercials – but the idea of a small Asian man whispering sweet nothings about video games into my slumbering ears sounds way dirtier!)

So I batted my eyelashes at Spoony and asked if I could borrow his Wii, since I’ve heard from nearly all my friends who have one that the novelty factor wears off after a month or so, and $199 is a hefty price to pay for a fleeting amusement. Upon getting it home, some hijinks and hilarity ensued, during which I nearly knocked over my hulking 42″ projection TV, which is a bottom-heavy beast that requires a massive reconverging of the color tubes any time I dare to jostle it from its resting place. I hauled it about a foot from the wall, then commenced 5 minutes of volleying my gaze between the back of the set and the twisted and tangled back-end of my audio receiver. The latter is about 8 years old, and I’ve never quite grasped how to use it. (I once spent many static-filled minutes trying to get the thing to broadcast a radio signal, while Spoony played with his iPhone and watched me in amusement.) I have a fondness for it though, with its “Star Trek remote” that has a screen that displays far more information that anyone truly needs, and yet doesn’t seem to facilitate anything useful. Still, hooking up the Wii to this monstrosity was testing my patience and technology skills, which I like to think are respectable, but the mystified reflection in the television screen said otherwise.

So off to the bedroom I went, where I got everything turned on and plugged in within 10 minutes time. (Awwwwwwwwwww yeah.)

Survey says? Well, I don’t have much to go on just yet, save Wii Sports and the yet-to-be-played Punch Out, which ejaculated … Err, ejected once the console sprang to life. I’m diggin’ it though! My golfing prowess could use some finesse, but I SCHOOLED at tennis (thank you, Rafa Nadal!) and all those nights spent being silly and semi-buzzed in bowling alleys seem to be paying off. This, too, is probably the one time that I would definitely choose sports games over RPGs, although the idea of swinging the Wii remote in the heat of a sword-fighting battle does sound most triumphant!

We’ll see how long the infatuation lasts though. Can the Wii provide the same countless hours of entertainment as its great-great grandfather console? Will it cause me to jump in the same way that Friday the 13th did? Will I find the Warp Whistle? Will I have the fondness for the Wii remote that Lucas did for the Power Glove, because it’s “so bad”?

One thing’s for certain … When it comes to consoles, I am most certainly a Nintend’ho.

{ 19 comments }