XCOM's Ironman Mode - A must for future strategy games

XCOM: Enemy Unknown For a week now, I have been play XCOM: Enemy Unknown every chance I get. It's a great game and any fan of the strategy genre should get this. But I'm not here to boast on how good this game is, I'll save that for a another post, this post is about Ironman mode, an advanced setting in the game that I think should come as a standard extra options for future strategy games. 

Ironman mode is an option in XCOM: Enemy Unknown that prevents you from loading your game. To put it simply, if shit hits the fan, you will have to live with it. Lost your best sniper? Too bad. When this mode is turned on, the game automatically saves each turn on the only save file for your current campaign. You can save it manually, but you can only overwrite your only file. You are forced to move on no matter what.

Sounds a bit harsh I know. We are all used to saving multiple times in different save slots, to take back mistakes. I do it too. But because of Iron Man mode, every single move actually counts now, just how it should be for a strategy game. Your patience will be tested. Overextend too much, and you just might lose your assault class that has already been promoted to Captain.

I was a bit wary to start my very first playthrough on Classic Ironman, but I kept hearing that XCOM is best appreciated on that kind of setting. So I went with Classic Iron Man when I popped the disc for the first time and almost instantly, I lost all control of my game. Squad members kept dying every mission, poor choice of money management, panic levels through the roof on most of the countries, before I knew it, I saw "Defeat" in my TV screen. Definitely a bad start.

It did not stop there too, the next 3-4 games ended in defeat. Losing too many experienced soldier make the game more difficulty because rookies aren't as reliable as promoted ones  especially when you start encountering the tougher aliens. You really feel the weight of a mission gone wrong. It sounds like a pain yes, but people learn, I got better.

5th time was sort of the charm in this case. I was doing great in  missions. Lost a few good men along the way, but my main force was maturing pretty well enough that I had the confidence that any mission would come out great. A terror mission comes up (Pretty tough, beware!), and I bring in my best guys to clean up some aliens. Well, long story short, it was the worst mission on that campaign. I lost everybody. Here's where Iron Man shines.

I could not reload. They were gone for good. My sniper nicknamed "Lockdown" had 30 alien kills was taken down by a Floater that flanked him from behind, he was a Colonel. Doc, my medic, tried to keep everybody alive but eventually got taken down by Crysalid, he should have pulled back when he could, he reached Major. "Badass Billy", my assault, missed two times point-blank, and thanks to those misses he was taken down my another floater. I had a connection with these men, they got me this far in the game, but now they are all in the memorial list. At this point I thought it was game over. I'm left with rookies, I did not prepare a second group. I was in bad shape. A new alien abduction mission showed up,  and it was make it or break it at this point. I knew if I failed this, more countries would leave the XCOM project and I would be forced to make yet another campaign.

I succeeded. It felt so good. For some reason every key shot connected. It was a perfect example of a successful operation. Out of the 6 rookies I sent to the mission, five came back with promotions (level up). From there, I knew I still had a chance. That kind of story, that kind of situation, and that feeling of pulling a miracle out of your ass was made possible by turning on Iron Man mode.

If I didn't have Iron Man mode on, I would have just reload the mission, do it right, and I still have Lockdown and Doc alive and still kicking ass. That would have been good too yes, but What senario do I prefer? the successful six rookie mission, hands down. It was intense.

As I moved on with the game after that mission, I was able to stay alive until the end. One more country withdrawing from the XCOM council will result in a game over, but I was able to prevent that all the way to the end. At the end of that campaign which resulted in a victory, Those five miracle rookies, 2 were left standing. I was forced to live with my mistakes and the situation I was in. Certain decisions felt more dire, and the pressure was always there. That was a great campaign.

This is how strategy games should be. There will always be player errors. A wrong unit move resulting in his death, wrong macro management, these aren't really errors but more of a decision we have to live with, and it makes the game more interesting this way.

Seeing Victory on the screen felt so good

Now, Ironman can't be for everybody, which is why I appreciate XCOM for putting it as an extra setting for players to have the choice to play the game that way.

I hope to see Iron Man be implemented in future strategy game titles. It makes so much sense to have that option on games such as Civilization and Total War, I'm actually excited to play those games again Ironman style.

It's definitely a challenge yes, but bringing out a win when bad situations have happened to you along the way is way more satisfying than finishing a campaign thanks to reloading when things went a bit sour.

 

 

 

13 minute gameplay walkthrough video of Far Cry 3's open world

Far Cry 3 will be an open world FPS game, similar to Far Cry 2. Sound awesome right? Well it depends. Far Cry 2's open world felt like a chore to move forward when I played it back in 2008. The feel to explore wasn't there for me, so this was my main concern when I started learning about Far Cry 3, did they improve in that aspect of the game? Check out this video that gives us a good look at Far Cry 3's open world gameplay.

The commentators of this video are Mark Thompson, lead level designer and Jamie Keen, Lead game designer of Far Cry 3.

It's good to see that there will be different kinds of side quests to pick up to give you more incentive to explore. Adding wildlife is also a great new addition, which seems to go well with the game's crafting system. I'm pretty impressed with the game's setting and revealed characters so far, especially Vaas, but my Far Cry 2 playthrough keeps reminding me that I might experience the same issues I had with the game's exploration. So yes, I'm still pretty cautious about this one.

Far Cry 3 comes out on Playstation 3, Xbox 360, and PC on November 29 for Austrailia and in the UK, the US will get the game a few days after on November 4.

[Source: Pixelenemy]

 

Halo 4 launch trailer shows a glimpse of Master Chief's past

Microsoft just released the launch trailer for the highly anticipated Halo 4. The trailer focuses on Master Chief's backstory as you see flashbacks of Chief before he took the Spartan suit. It's a perfect blend of CGI and live action. Check it out below.

This will be the first Halo title without Bungie as the developers. The developers of Halo 4, 343 Industries, has worked with Bungie in previous Halo  projects, but this will be the first game that was directly developed in that studio. It's a bold first step as a studio, to take on a monster IP like halo, I'm sure they feel the pressure.

Excited for another trilogy of Master Chief? Halo 4 is released on November 6 exclusive to Xbox 360.

Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 goes ACDC in its launch trailer

Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 is less than a month away. Its launch trailer just hit and not only does it show off all the near future gadgets you get to use in the single player campaign, they add a great song that goes well with all those explosions.

Black Ops 2 is looking good so far. I think the last time I was excited for a Call of Duty game was when the first Black Ops was released.

Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 is schedule for a November 13 released on Playstation 3, Xbox 360, and PC.

DMC: Devil May Cry NYCC trailer, console demo coming before release

DMC Ninja Theory's take on Capcom's Devil May Cry series has a new trailer that came from this year's New York Comic Con. If you're having second doubts on the upcoming Devil May Cry, good news, you get to test drive Dante's new look first. During the event, they also mentioned a demo version of DMC is planned before the game ships. 

As reported byJoystiq, Capcom is planning to release the demo online prior to the game's launch. No firm date to when the demo will be available but its good to know that a demo is on the way. It's a bit petty but I actually have doubts of the game because of  the change in Dante's looks and the story set in a different reality. Yes, I know its a reboot and all, but I'm still leaning to the old Devil May Cry. Core gameplay seem intact, but hopefully it plays just as well as it looks.

DMC: Devil May Cry is scheduled for a January 15, 2013 release for Playstation 3, and Xbox 360. With the PC version to follow soon after.