Entertainer
Gawd
- Joined
- Apr 16, 2011
- Messages
- 639
Fail, maybe Gabe tossed this game into the pile for you because of that letter you sent him.
I bought it, thanks.
I bought it, thanks.
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Meh ..... having a game in my Steam library adds value to it as far as I'm concerned.no DRM tying it to requiring me to be on Steam either!
Meh ..... having a game in my Steam library adds value to it as far as I'm concerned.
Unnoficial patch fixes bugs, compatibility, rendering, broken quests, animations, etc. True patch does quite a bit of that but adds what the modders THOUGHT was supposed to go into the game. Some people like that, some don't.
Thanks for the link, Op failed to provide.
Yeah, it's a pretty cold deal. The game isn't even that good.isnt this game super old and still 5 dollars for it?
Yeah, it's a pretty cold deal. The game isn't even that good.
Two modders disagreed with each other on what should be done. The person that did the True patch supposedly was a drama queen & kept the drama war going for a long time. I prefer the unofficial patch myself, much like the majority of the VtM:R community (as much as I've read into it).
The game is about 40-70 hours long depending on your playstyle and how much of it you actually desire to play before completion.
Somehow I can't really see how that could be true for a 2004 title, regardless of the community patches. There's only so much nostalgia most people are willing and able to put up with.Most people will probably get a very good value for $5.
Thanks for the link, Op failed to provide.
Game looks meh, $45 on Quakecon pack I got a couple months ago is more of a [H]ottest steam deal ever.
Somehow I can't really see how that could be true for a 2004 title, regardless of the community patches. There's only so much nostalgia most people are willing and able to put up with.
Well this is one of the definite experiences in PC gaming, I would buy it and PLAY it if I were you, but as I stated in another post in this thread, it's a game you can feel satisfied in playing in chunks.
By that I mean it's optimum to play it for 2-4 hours at a time, then put it down, then pick it back up and play some more. It's one of THOSE kind of games. Sure you can play it for hours on end, but it's best left as that one game that's at the edge of your consciousness when you boot up your computer, and when you go back to it, it's like going back to an old favorite memory.
It's a little hard to explain, but I'm sure you'd understand if you play it.
I have a copy from D2D & it has DRM built in when you run the game initially. It phones home to D2D to verify your license. I usually use a non-DRM'd binary instead that so I don't have that crap popping up if some mod goes funny. I recommend purchasing it on Steam over D2D unless they cleaned up the DRM BS builtin.
Somehow I can't really see how that could be true for a 2004 title, regardless of the community patches. There's only so much nostalgia most people are willing and able to put up with.
Somehow I can't really see how that could be true for a 2004 title, regardless of the community patches. There's only so much nostalgia most people are willing and able to put up with.
Game looks meh?
I guess if you're a graphics > gameplay kind of guy sure.
However Vampire: TMB is probably one of the best action-rpgs that provide you with a ton of player choice/freedom. To the point you can use dialogue to talk down a boss or ifght them, etc.
It's from Troika games (many ex-fallout guys) and is hands down one of the best rpgs, let alone vampire themed game, out there.
The sheer difference between some characters you can play as is quite great, such as the Nosferatu vampires who can't just walk around (because of their appearance) or the Malkavian's who are for the lack of a better word, nuts, to the point that while playing as them you'll have many off-the-wall things to talk about, even have a conversation with a bloody street sign.
seems like a whole lot of trouble to go through just to play the game properly. http://forums.steampowered.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2025035
Somehow I can't really see how that could be true for a 2004 title, regardless of the community patches. There's only so much nostalgia most people are willing and able to put up with.
Nostalgia is people replaying things they already completed.
Not people playing things for the first time.
Are you saying Deus Ex is a bad game even though it came out in 2001? I'm playing it right now and it knocks the pants off out of almost everything released in the last five years.