What other games are we all playing?

Was it in VR or 2d? It is quite decent in VR considering it's a fan-made mod

Don’t have a machine capable of playing it this way, and wouldn’t have enjoyed troubleshooting my way through getting it to work on a first playthrough; but it’s something I’d like to return to eventually and try in VR. It certainly seems well suited to the format.
 
Don’t have a machine capable of playing it this way, and wouldn’t have enjoyed troubleshooting my way through getting it to work on a first playthrough; but it’s something I’d like to return to eventually and try in VR. It certainly seems well suited to the format.
As for troubleshooting it's pretty mature. Installation is a .dll drag and drop. There are some glitches and imperfections (for example Alias Isolation mod isn't working so VR exposes the jaggies) and there's pop-in, but the experience of playing Alien Isolation in VR is... one of a kind. That said, the author recently resurfaced and maybe development will resume or it will be opensourced.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNmSWrrWsoY
 
What's this "Breathedge" game? It kinda looks like Subnautica in space..

iu
 
Pathfinder Kingmaker.

Nicely harks back to the old days of Baldur's Gate 2, a spirit that BG3 doesn't quite capture for me.

I also like how you can adjust the difficulty on the fly and to suit your party. All the munchkins and minmaxers boasting of how they can complete the game on hardest difficutly while cheesing the hell out of the mechanics, and here's me creating characters named after Santa's reindeer!

EDIT: Here is my party

EYdfwgC.png
 
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Does anybody play Rebel Galaxy Outlaw ?
I tried it but it didn't sit right with me.
I really love the original RG with its massive ships, broadsiding combat and interesting dynamic universe, but the second one is just weird. The ships are weird, the combat is weird and the whole things feel really limited in many ways.
Maybe I just didn't give it enough time to grow on me, who knows.
But I know people who liked it a lot, so it's probably just the case of a "not for me" game.
 
Pathfinder Kingmaker.

Nicely harks back to the old days of Baldur's Gate 2, a spirit that BG3 doesn't quite capture for me.

I also like how you can adjust the difficulty on the fly and to suit your party. All the munchkins and minmaxers boasting of how they can complete the game on hardest difficutly while cheesing the hell out of the mechanics, and here's me creating characters named after Santa's reindeer!

EDIT: Here is my party

EYdfwgC.png
Enjoying this game? Steam emailed me to let me know it's on sale, very considerate of them.
 
Advice needed, Project cars 2. OK. My ego, has had me reduce traction control and ABS to about 10%. However: When I play on-line, I see other players, braking in much less space and pulling away from corners, much earlier and faster. So. Should I ignore my ego and just put both up to 100%?
 
Enjoying this game? Steam emailed me to let me know it's on sale, very considerate of them.

Loving it.

Also the kingdom management part i didn't think i would like, but its actually ok, although i turned down the difficulty of that to effortless because the last thing i want is the fate of my kingdom depending on dice rolls (which can happen as some events are resolved via "cards" where you assign one of your advisors to deal with and there is a DC check roll for it). Others you go out and resolve yourself, like finding a missing child that has been taken by a witch.

There is the main story, which has time limits on it (many things do) but for the main story you can just focus on that and then worry about some of the bigger kingdom stuff later as you get months or even years between the acts which allows you plenty of time for adventuring and dealing with developing your kingdom.

Or you can just change the kingdom stuff to automatic and you can forget about it... although i've heard that bad things (tm) can happen on automatic.
 
Instead of E:D? That's easy. Are you interested in MMORPGs? If yes, you can totally be looking forward to WoW TBC Classic. Burning Crusade Classic, which launches June 1, aims to be a little less faithful by design; Blizzard is actively tinkering with the experience. It’s a new approach that’s aptly called “some changes,” and it should make Burning Crusade more viable to play long-term.

Those changes include better matchmaking for the new Arena mode, which has 2v2, 3v3, and 5v5 competitive matches to get TBC Gold. The raids, like Tempest Keep and Sunwell Plateau, are also going to be a little tougher. Bosses will be at their pre-nerf difficulty, and it remains to be seen whether players will burn through these challenges in minutes.
 
Advice needed, Project cars 2. OK. My ego, has had me reduce traction control and ABS to about 10%. However: When I play on-line, I see other players, braking in much less space and pulling away from corners, much earlier and faster. So. Should I ignore my ego and just put both up to 100%?
GIT GUD!!!11111 ;-))))))

btw. had the same humiliating experience in PC or Assetto Corsa and decided that smart people who put thought into how these systems work were much smarter than me. Fun fact, had a real life 306HP car, never ever ever ever had I turned off traction control on it - and it was always reliable and pulling through corners effortlessly :) And it makes sense, as it could brake each individual wheel separately based on separate sensors, a feat that humans simply can't do using just one foot and a backside 😂. All what was left was pure joy of driving (yes it was a BMW :D)
 
Loving it.

Also the kingdom management part i didn't think i would like, but its actually ok, although i turned down the difficulty of that to effortless because the last thing i want is the fate of my kingdom depending on dice rolls (which can happen as some events are resolved via "cards" where you assign one of your advisors to deal with and there is a DC check roll for it). Others you go out and resolve yourself, like finding a missing child that has been taken by a witch.

There is the main story, which has time limits on it (many things do) but for the main story you can just focus on that and then worry about some of the bigger kingdom stuff later as you get months or even years between the acts which allows you plenty of time for adventuring and dealing with developing your kingdom.

Or you can just change the kingdom stuff to automatic and you can forget about it... although i've heard that bad things (tm) can happen on automatic.

Funnily enough, I started Kingmaker yesterday. Looking forward to it, the kingdom management should give it its distinct personality amongst the rest of Infinity Engine style rpgs.
 
Played Pathfinder Kingmaker over my lunch hour.
Did a quick start game using a template melee dude.
20 mins in, no idea what I'm doing at all, which is fine.
 
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