Learning the ropes ...

These past few days have been all about learning the right way to play Half-Life and games in general. I spent a few hours on Saturday with pupismyname at his house and we loaded my quicksave game on his machine and I began to play with him watching over my shoulder. When I left off the last time I was experiencing my first encounter with the soldiers. One lucky grenade launch later and I had cleared the room of them. I took that slow opportunity to practice my movement. I thought I showed improvement, but one glaring weakness is that I'm too wrapped up in movement to really look around and pay attention. I was too concerned with getting two clips of ammo that I didn't see a grenade launched at me (I died). As I made it up an elevator shaft I got outside to an area with helicopters and a ton of soldiers, with much of the same results. I was too wrapped up in my movements to watch out for a bombardment of soldiers and grenades.

This is where practice comes in and I am focused at the moment on getting these moves down. I may back track in the game, do another round in the training facility, or even start the game over to sure up these movements. Regardless, I want the full experience of half-life instead of just "getting by" so I'm going to do what I have to do.

Sorry there aren't any screen shots of the latest action, but I wasn't playing on my machine. There will be more soon as I play again.

An awesome shacker that goes by changejar419 heard my cries of weakness as far as my movement in half-life and recommended to me that I play a game like Unreal Tournament. So he sent me UT2K4 in the mail.



and this awesome letter ...



I have no idea what this game is about, but it's worth a shot. If it can help me learn to play the right way, I'm game.

more to come ...

Labels: , , , , , ,

4 Comments:

At February 25, 2008 5:43 PM , Blogger Andy said...

That letter is awesome.

 
At February 25, 2008 5:46 PM , Blogger Killah Mate said...

That's a very very cool gesture, and an awesome letter.
But be forewarned, the letter should be taken seriously. Unreal Tournament lies at the other end of the FPS spectrum, among the online shooters, where everything really is about one thing: technique. There is some light weapons/powerup management and such to contend with, but no real exploration because the arenas (levels) are fixed and enemies interchangeable. Games like Unreal Tournament (also Quake, for example) live and die on your technique. Consider it electroshock skill therapy.
It's really not a bad idea; I cut my teeth on the first Unreal Tournament, and use that skillset to this day, a decade later. And the game is really very configurable, so you can set up your own shooting gallery with really stupid bot enemies and train all you like.

 
At February 25, 2008 7:32 PM , Blogger Mike Hammock said...

Good for you! Practice, practice, practice. Once you are no longer fighting the controls, the game will be much more fun.

 
At February 26, 2008 8:27 AM , Blogger Thing 2 said...

AMAZING!! Bravo to them!! That simulator will help!

 

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home