Coach Calvert

This morning I completed my certification to coach U6 soccer in GA; at least according to the Georgia State Soccer Association. The course was only 4 hours, but it was actually entertaining, informative, and educational.

I played soccer for several years growing up, so I know the rules, theory, and all, but I had no idea how to “teach” soccer. I think this course will go a long ways towards helping. All of the drills should help the kids develop a sense of the game, and develop their skills in a fun, practical way. Hopefully.

Interesting enough, we ran drills for about 90 minutes, and surely enough I am bitterly out of shape. Man that sucks. I celebrated on the way home by picking up a chocolate malt from Sonic. I mean, why fight the power?

Wish me luck with the kids!

Share

Winning Eleven 8

Last night I finally got to open my copy of Winning Eleven 8 that has been sitting on the table for the last few days. I am starting off my matches on 2-stars, using West Midlands Village, in order to get ready for Ted’s WE8 League @ SGN, but so far I am finding this level much too easy. Typical scores have all been in my favor: 3-0, 4-0, 5-0, etc. Too ho-hum even against Brazil, which I drummed 4-1.

I have never been what I would call an expert at WE, much less creative in the box, but with this year’s addition, I have been able to head balls in, first touch strikes into the net, and just hit strong blasts past the defending goalie. It could be a case of WE8 being slightly easier than WE7, or it could just be that practice makes perfect. Or maybe I am finally getting the hang of this game after the third PS2 release (3rd time is the charm).

At this point I only have a couple of observations. For whatever reason, I am finding control around the out of bounds lines pretty spotty. I do not remember the CPU taking over my player in past games, but it at first glance it sure seems like I have limited control over the player chasing the ball towards the line.

The ball physics around the net are nothing short of astonishing. While I have scored a couple of goals in the same manner – goalie punches the ball out, and one of my strikers collects and fires into the back of the net while the goalie lies helplessly on the ground – there is nothing scripted about the ball’s behavior around the box. It is really amazing to watch replay after replay to see how the ball moves, and how the players react.

More to come later.

Share

Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona

Tomorrow at 12PM EST is the start of the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona. I know that in the US NASCAR is much more popular that pretty much any other sort of racing. With that said, NASCAR fans should watch because some of your favorite drivers are in the event.

“No less than nine full-time NASCAR NEXTEL Cup stars are slated to drive Daytona Prototypes in the season-opening Rolex 24, February 3 – 6, and six of them were in action Friday as three-day testing got underway on the 3.56-mile Daytona road course.

Reigning NEXTEL Cup champion Kurt Busch, Matt Kenseth, Greg Biffle, Tony Stewart, Jimmie Johnson, Casey Mears, Jamie McMurray and brothers Bobby and Terry Labonte will all drive top-of-the-line Daytona Prototypes in the 43rd annual running of North America’s premier endurance race. Busch, Kenseth, Biffle, Mears, McMurray and the Labonte brothers all got behind the wheel Friday, some strapping into a Daytona Prototype for the very first time. Stewart will miss testing this weekend while he competes in the Chili Bowl midget race and Johnson is scheduled to arrive on Sunday.” [Source: RacingOne]

You should also check out Geoff P.’s first blog entry for The Elder Gamer. When Chris (blog’s founder) has time to post, this blog is usually a great read.

Share

Gran Turismo 4 – Almost Home

It is hard to believe, but Gran Turismo 4 is almost here. The question is “Will any one care?” I am sure that GT4 will be picked up by a ton of gamers, but the release is almost anti-climatic. Gamers have been waiting for this title for a long (very long) time. A lack of online racing is going to piss off many a gamers, and no improvements to the racing AI and the lack of more CPU AI cars per race is going to dampen my parade.

Oh well, ebgames.com says the game is coming

“We are writing to let you know that we have changed the projected ship date for Gran Turismo 4 to 2/22/2005.”

Hopefully GT4 is not just GT3 with more cars and better graphics. We already got that with GT2 and GT3. I know I will invest some time and energy in the game, but not nearly as much as GT1 or GT3 – graphical updates are not really my favorite flavor of the day.

Share

College Football Starts Now!

For many college football fans, today is the day that the Lord has made for football goodness. Coaches can now breath a sigh of relief (or anguish) as their unbinding verbal commitments sign on the dotted line. For fans, bragging rights begin, and spring football cannot come fast enough.

Yes, I am talking about National Signing Day. The day when grumpy old men put their hopes and dreams on young men (OK, kids) who officially commit to “their” schools. Yes, National Signing Day has arrived.

I am a huge college football fan, but I have never really pinned my hopes and dreams on signing day. Nor have I ever paid much attention to Spring football. I mean I do follow Georgia and what caliber of recruits they are landing, and what the depth chart looks like. Sure, I do all that, but some people get way out of control. Just look around the Internet – a whole cottage industry has been built around the high school recruiting process.

The fact of the matter is that no one really knows how a recruiting class will turn out until two to three years down the road. An occasional freshman will rise to early stardom, but these “horses” are the exception, not the norm. Besides, just because a school lands a top player does not mean that player will ever step on the playing field. Many recruits may fail to gain academic eligibility, others may grow home sick, and still others may decide to play another spot. It is a risky business pinning hopes and dreams on a recruiting class.

No time for a serious rant today. May your team get plenty of blue chip prospects!

Share

Take Two Gets In Bed With the MLB

I am going to do something I rarely do – cross post. In this case I figured it was worth while to post here, my recent post to the Sports Gaming Nation message board concerning Take Two’s newly acquired deal with the MLB. If you have not checked out SGN, it is a wonderful hangout, and one of the few places that I actually bother to post to these days.

I figured Take Two was rather small, but they actually have a market cap of 1.64B.

“Some analysts had speculated last week that despite Take-Two’s claim that the deals were “exclusives,” EA might be able to team up with Sony, say, to develop a baseball game for the PlayStation 2. But the agreements appear to close that loophole.

After the baseball players association announced its deal with Take-Two last week, EA officials dismissed the move, noting that baseball was one of the company’s least popular sports titles.” [reference]

Say what you want about exclusives, but it does not seem very smart of any sport to exclude EA … they are just two big, too popular, and have too much marketing money. It figures that the MLB would have its collective head so far up its ass that it would do something like this.

I bet at some point (if this is a long term contract) Take Two will be looking to dump this license.

OOTP is a great baseball game without a license, but I do not see EA or anyone else putting in the time or effort because I do not see an unlicensed baseball game making much of an impact in the console market. 10-15 years ago … maybe … but not today.

I have been pretty silent on the NFL exclusive deal because I do not see it being a big deal to the majority of football fans. EA and the EA Sports brand is huge. They already have the top selling football game in Madden, and the EA Sports brand already has exclusive deals with NASCAR and FIFA. Acquiring the NFL and eventually the ESPN brand just made business sense.

Not so with Take Two and the MLB. Perhaps I am coming across as an EA Fan Boy. Whatever, but I see Take Two and the MLB doing very little with the license other than blocking EA from making officially licensed baseball games. Maybe twice as much as Konami and the MLS did with their joint venture, but we all know that amounted to pretty much nothing.

In the end the mass market may not care. They may come to associate MLB = Take Two, but I would not be shocked if Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo (all of which are allowed to make their own MLB branded games) put together baseball games that sold better than Take Two. In the end, this deal (depending on actual finical terms) could hemorrhage Take Two and their stockholders.

I am sure others will agree that all does not see well with the world of sports gaming right now.

Share

Xbox Finally Pulls Its Weight

According to the Washington Post (Jan 27, 2005 online article) the Xbox pulled in a profitable quarter, which is big news for Microsoft.

“Microsoft also reported its first profitable quarter in its home and entertainment division, fueled by strong sales for its Xbox Live online gaming service and the popular Halo 2 video game. The unit reported operating income of $84 million for the three-month period, compared with a loss of $397 million in the same period a year earlier.

But Chief Financial Officer John Connors warned that the home and entertainment division would lose money again in the first six months of 2005, and likely won’t achieve consistent profitability until late 2006 or early 2007.”

For any doubters (and I admit that I was one) it looks like Microsoft is here to stay in the console business. Bravo to the US for once again having a profitable (be it only for a quarter) console manufacturer.

Share

PSP – What I Want

I thought it would be fun (for me anyway) to share what I want and why. For starters I am primarily a sports gamer, so you can imagine that I am going to *need* a couple of sports titles. The same goes for racing: a system just is not a system with out a good racing game or three. Beyond that I need some sort of diversion that is really good for pick up and play style gaming.

I do not have unlimited funds, but I figure that I can swing the system plus 2-5 games. So here goes …


  • FIFA Soccer or World Tour Soccer PSP. I really have no idea which game will be the better soccer title.

  • Baseball. I really would like a quality portable baseball game. Right now MVP Baseball is the only one listed as a launch title. If I get a portable game for 50 bones, then I am not going to buy a console version this year, so I have to be really cautious with this selection.

  • Football. Damn, no can do here since nothing is listed.

  • Archer Mclean’s Mercury. This looks very interesting, and different; thus worth picking up because it looks to fit the pick up and play mold perfectly. Still, $50 for a marble madness clone is kind of a hard sale.

  • Ridge Racers. I am a huge fan of the series.

  • Wipeout Pure. Looks freaking awesome (in my best schoolboy voice).

  • Twisted Metal: Head On. I love TM, TM2 and TM:Black, so Head On looks interesting. Still, will it pack enough replay value to warrant a full price, day one purchase? Not really sure … more research is in order.


So right out of the gate I am over budget by at least a couple of games. I am going to wait as long as possible before deciding to pick any of the above titles.

Other items of interests, but not necessarily launch day titles/purchases are Formula 1 2004 (this would rule if it were a decent simulation), Grand Theft Auto (may be interesting to see what RockStar games does with the PSP), Puyo Pop Fever (I can play Puyo Pop all day, but not for $50), Gran Turismo 4 Mobile (the PS2 GT4 may be all the GT that I need), Colin McRae PSP (could be a true system seller for me if it plays well).

And for the record, I am not one of those gamers that mind that many PS2 type games are going to be on the PSP. There is a reason that I enjoyed certain games on the PSX and PS2, so having PSP versions for on the go play is all the better in my book. With that said, I still hope to see innovation, but I doubt we will see much out of the gate.

Share

PSP Preorder Crap

So PSPs are finally available for preorder from ebgames.com and gamestop.com. Of course mom forgot to tell the greedy bastards running the bundle scams that they should play nice. Come on, four hundred freaking duckets for a PSP, an accessory, and three games at ebgames.com? Actually it is a little better, when I first put together this entry the listing said, “Three games of your choice from a select list of launch titles.” The “select list” part was very bothersome, but now the listing says, “Three games of your choice from the finalized list of launch titles.”

Still, four hundred? If you figure $200 for the system + $150 for three games, you are still having to shell out $50 for an accessory. That pretty much blows.

gamestop.com is not much better. They give you the choice of two bundles at $379 (system + accessory + 3 predetermined games) or a $479 bundle (system + accessory + 5 predetermined games).

Bundles suck for consumers. Not only do you not get to buy what you want, but the stores price them out the nose. I know when it is all said and done that I will end up with anywhere from 2-5 launch games, but I want to actually be allowed to select the games, and I sure as hell do not want some crap accessory.

For the first time in years I decided to do a preorder at a brick and mortar – the local ebgames. They told me that I only had to put $20 down, that I did not have to buy a bundle, and that I did not have to buy anything other than the system. Period. End of story. So I thought.

The nice lady told me that I “should” get one since I was number 61 or so on the preorder list. I do not really like the sound of that, but it is better than a $400 commitment to some unknown bundle. So today I decided to call the same story, play stupid (not very hard for me), and ask about the PSP.

At this point I am allowed to put down anywhere from $20-400. The $400 part sounds kind of ominous, but at this point there is no bundle to buy. Once they have pricing and availability from Sony they will call preorder customers and let us know the procedures to secure our PSPs. That really sounds like a bundle waiting to happen. Finally, after I asked about guaranteed availability, the guy said I should get one. When asked for the number of preorders so far, he said 31.

Not that it matters, but 31-61 is a fairly wide range. Not to mention the vague and ambiguous responses to my questions about preordering guaranteeing me a system. You know the brick and mortar bastards are going to also require some sort of stupid bundle.

I want a PSP, but I care not for bundles (as if you could not figure that out by now). The question is, “Am I prepared to walk?” Part of me says “F’ it!” – the other part of me is really looking forward to a PSP.

I have no idea if I can trust the brick and mortar to deliver me a launch day system, so now it may be back to a ebgames.com preorder.

Life is full of flavors, trying to decide which one to pick is half the fun.

Share

Busted iPod, Best Buy – Life Lesson #13457

Well yesterday morning it finally happened. My trusty iPod fell out of my coat pocket right smack dab on the street. The poor guy did not look worse for the wear, but of course my music was slightly skippy and static filled after the fall.

I never pay for extended warranties or the like because I do not feel they are worth the money. However, since I just spent $399 + tax on this contraption I let the Best Buy sales lady talk me into a replacement plan. Or so I thought. The nice lady told me how it was easier for them (i.e. Best Buy) to just give me a new iPod instead of sending it in for a replacement battery. Same thing went for a busted iPod. It sounded too good to be true, but I guess I was drunk on iPod happiness at the time, so I forked over another $40 for the replacement plan.

Last night I took my iPod into Best Buy and the repair guy informed me that they would ship my iPod off for repairs. When I questioned him “Why? I thought I would get a replacement.” I was told that I actually had a Product Service Plan (PSP) not a Product Replacement Plan (PRP).

Of course my reaction was “What the hell? That was not what I was told at the time of purchase.” I told the guy the sales pitch I received and he said something like “Show me who and I will kick them.” I told him to go kick the person that showed up on the receipt since the register number and clerk were on the print-out. He did not think that was very clever.

Anyway, long story short, at one time Best Buy did PRPs for MP3 players, but I guess they got smart and realized that was not such a good idea for them. So now my iPod is on a trip to the official Apple iPod repair place, in parts unknown, and is not scheduled to show back up until February 3rd.

Sucks for me. The life lesson of the story is to not drop your iPod on the street. And you figured I was going to give some “moral of the story” spill about reading the fine print on product service/replacement plans.

Share

Getting SLAX

We are about to slip into embarrassing geek territory, but here goes nothing. Last night while watching The Screen Savers (G4TechTV) they had a segment on SLAX, a “live” Linux distribution. By live (I am not sure what the “official” term is) I mean that this distribution of Linux will boot the Linux kernel (or OS) off of a CD or some other device besides your hard disk drive.

A live install is perfect for many users that want to sample Linux without having to worry about setups, disk partitions, etc. No muss, no fuss. Several years ago I ran Red Hat via System Commander, but these days I am not running Linux, which made the Screen Savers show fairly useful. A live Linux distribution would be helpful to me since I am not running Linux at home any more, and because I deal with Solaris daily at work.

Back to the geek thing. So off I went to get SLAX Linux Live; downloaded the ISO CD image from the site. Next I downloaded a few modules such as Foxfire, and then created my SLAX CD. I threw the disk in my old Dell P600 system, rebooted, and a few minutes later I was running a live distribution of Linux. Very nice.

I did not get too deep since it was around a quarter till 5 (as in AM … ouch, got up much too early), but my sound card did not work properly – maybe it is too old for this distribution. There were other things that probably did not work, but most importantly for me, or I should say luckily, Opera fired up right away and a surfing I did go. Very cool!

Next up was my IBM Thinkpad R40 that I use for work; this laptop was the reason the Screen Savers segment caught my attention in the first place. Damn CD would not boot. XP, after XP boot-up sequence, which was really raining on my parade. After much searching on the Internet (have to love this bastion of knowledge) I saw a suggestion that I should try to reduce the write speed when I burn the ISO CD image. I figured that was pretty stupid since my CD-ROM burner was old and topped out at 16x. With nothing to lose, I did another burn at the slowest possible speed – 4x.

This time I was running SLAX on my R40 in no time flat. I am not sure why the ISO CD burn speed mattered, but there you have it – if your ISO CD image works on one machine, but not another, try burning again on a slower speed. The problem probably had something to do with the cheap IBM DVD player crap in my Thinkpad.

OK, so I am now running SLAX on my Thinkpad, which is cool, but the real fun or rather the real problems are just beginning. I cannot get SLAX to recognize my built in wireless adaptor (a Cisco Aironet Wirless 802.11b if you can help me out), so no internet connection for me. That is obviously a major bump in the live Linux road. I also could not figure out how to map my hard disk drive, which I bet is Linux admin ignorance on my part, but definitely another strike against this distribution.

If Linux is to become more mainstream, live distributions are certainly the way to go. The no mess thing should be appealing to almost everyone. With that said, these Linux distributions need to do a much better job of recognizing devices, hard disks, etc. Hey, not having an internet connection will pretty much rule out using this distribution. I feel sure from searching the SLAX forum that I am not the only one in this boat wireless connectivity (or lack of) seems to be a fairly common problem. This is not so good. Once again, all of this may be user error – will certainly update if I get this junk working.

On the positive side, the KDE interface was simple, easy to use, and seemed fair solid. Not that I have not used KDE and Gnome before, but never via a live distribution. There are plenty of built in applications, including the all too important game category. Doom, available via a free downloadable module! Woo-hoo! The media darling lives on! The SLAX site also has plenty of other useful and very free modules that are ready to plug in and go, which is another nice bonus.

If I can get my wireless connection going, I think I will be pretty pleased with SLAX, but as it stands I need to find a live distribution that will allow me to connect wirelessly to the Internet.

Share

Getting Fancy with Calvert Games Classic

I have a nasty stomach flu bug. When I say nasty, I am talking seriously nasty. I will not go into the gory details, but suffice it to say that I could not manage to make it into the office today. As long as I was stuck at home, I decided to do something useful with the site, so I implemented the Fancy URLs feature. Many of you are saying, “Big deal, and WTF is that?”

Google (and other search engine spiders) does not like to go through CG’s standard URLs that have all sorts of question marks and the like. So now instead of

http://www.calvertgames.com/cgblog/index.php?catid=2&blogid=1

you get

http://www.calvertgames.com/cgblog/category/2/blogid/1

… all thanks to the nifty Fancy URLs feature.

Maybe someone will be impressed, then again …

On an entirely different note, after looking through a lot of my older games, I have become a little sentimental. I have been trying to decide what should stay, and what should go. One of the unfortunate side affects of me closing the door on CG and reopening as a blog, was a lot of lost data. 100+ reviews, plenty of editorials, virtual sports write-ups, and a whole host of other junk lost in one shift of change in site philosophy.

Over the next few days (maybe weeks) I am contemplating bringing back the CG’s previous content in an archive format; something along the lines of Calvert Games Classic. I am biased, but there was a lot of good content that some gamers may actually find useful, or dare I say entertaining.

For those that are interested, I will keep you posted.

Share

Dirt Track Racing

This afternoon I was flipping around on the boob tube looking for something interesting while everyone was taking a nap when I came across an interesting show on demolition derby on the Discovery Times Channel. It was fairly interesting and made me realize that it has been three or so years since I played Destruction Derby, which was one of the key reasons I preordered a PlayStation.

Next up was a show on dirt track racing, which was more entertaining than the demolition derby show. We are not talking about top-notch entertainment, but both shows made me realize that I missed my calling in life. I should have been a mechanic by day and a racer on the weekends. My slogan above my store would have read “We only rip you off half as much as the other guys!”

Seriously, as much as I write (or used to write) about cars, racing, tuning, and such, I really am not a gear-head. Maybe I will have to do something about that one day, but like a lot of other things, it will not happen today.

Anyway, watching the two shows about demolition derby and dirt track racing made me realize that Ratbag’s World of Outlaws Sprint Cars 2002 is a great racing game that developed a cult following at sports sites. My understanding is that it is now “rare” on eBay, but the game just never caught on with mainstream gamers. I guess the graphics were not sexy enough, but WoO’s racing action is second to none.

Of course like too many other games, WoO never got the absolute attention that it deserved from this gamer. I always played it in spurts, but never solid balls to the walls gaming sessions that games like Colin McRae Rally 2.0, Gran Turismo, and various F1 games received. I definitely need to give it another spin sometime soon because it would be the perfect racing game to hold me over until GT4 arrives. A paid for game is a much better proposition than spending more money on something that is probably not half as good as WoO.

Saturday Night Speedway (also by Ratbag) is another dirt track game that I need to pop back into the PS2. Unlike WoO, I barely gave Saturday Night Speedway a decent chance. I have no idea what distracted me from the game, but I only played it a handful of times before it was pushed to the back of the library.

Thanks to the Discovery Times Channel I now have 3-4 more titles that once again deserve time in my rotation. We are truly in a special age of gaming – it is amazing that there are so many good “current” games today that deserve our time, but there are still plenty of games released in the last 10 years that deserve just as much attention.

Share

Random Video Game Stuffs

When is an off day from work not really an off day? When mommy is sick and daddy has to pretend to take mommy’s place. And I say “pretend” in the nicest sort of way; I am a pretty poor mom, so kudos to Tonya for doing such a good job of the mommy thing.

Falcons vs. Eagles
OK, nothing to do with video games unless I play this one in Madden 2005 this week. Anyway, I expect this week’s game to be much hard than the Rams game last Saturday, in fact, I expect the Eagles defense to be downright scary vs. Vick. My biggest fear is that the Eagles will just watch some Tampa Bay game tapes from the last couple of years and more or less neutralize Vick.

The early line is Eagles -4.5. Enough worrying about that for now; will write more later in the week.

Tempest X3
Much like Xevious 3D/G+ (see post from last night), Tempest X3 is an updated shooter based on a classic game. In this case, Tempest X3 for the PlayStation pays homage to the Atari classic Tempest. Gamers paying attention to their video game history will best remember Tempest X3 as an updated version of the cult classic Tempest 2000, which was pretty much the only decent game released for the Atari Jaguar. Did that system bomb or what?

When Tempest X3 was released way back in 1996, the game was not very well received, despite being a very good upgrade of the classic Tempest. It is one of those things where gamers were expecting more from the PSX other than a graphically version of a classic title. I expect that Tempest X3 would have done much better if it was released as part of one of the Atari compilation games as an “extra” but no one asked me.

Tempest X3 screams for a knob/paddle controller since it does not have analog support. Even so, the game plays well enough with the standard d-pad, but this sort of game was never intended for a traditional d-pad. The graphics are nice, but pretty much what was already done one the Jaguar. The game’s soundtrack is very good, and the gameplay is pretty much classic Tempest. If you have played Tempest, Tempest X3 is really just the same thing with updated graphics, and a nice soundtrack.

With all that said, is Tempest X3 worth keeping, which is the reason I breaking out some of these older games, or should Tempest X3 be sold? It is a tough call. I have not touched the game in years, so it is just collecting the mythical dust bunnies. Looking at my collection of PSX games, I am really kicking myself because I should have sold Tempest X3 and a whole host of others when they had some value. Right now it looks like I can get $7-10 bucks for the game. I may just hang onto it for a while since it is listed as “rare” in some listings. Hopefully 6-12 months from now someone will really *need* a mint condition copy of Tempest X3. Funny how that works; if the game was really all that rare then it would be worth more than $10 duckets.

Speaking of eBay
I was not getting enough time with NBA Live 2005, so I put it up for sale of eBay. This is really not a damning indictment of the game, but rather it just reflects a lack of time for a basketball game right now. I figured that I better sale it now since the MSRP was already down to $29.99. I pulled in $19.52 for it, which was really nice considering that Wal-Mart has it on sale for $24.99 this week.

Winning Eleven 7 was another game that I decided to sale because I wanted to get some value for it before Winning Eleven 8 is released in 2-3 weeks. I hope WE8 is just as good or better than WE7 or this gamer is going to be mightily disappointed. I can see it now: WE7 goes up in price and becomes “rare” because WE8 is broken. I cleared a fantastic $31.50 for WE7, so I am going to get WE8 for $8.50. Fantastic!

Train Jacking
Spoiler alert; this is the last part of this blog entry, and it deals with GTA:SA. I suggest reading no further if you do not like spoilers. The title sub-title probably gives it away, but so it goes.

Last night I was cruising around the city and finally noticed a train running along the tracks. I have driven many a times on the track, but have never seen a train running until last night. Naturally I figured I would do something interesting like jack a car and place it in front of the train. I did not get the intended boom, so I decided to keep running along the side of the train. At a train station it finally slowed down, and I figured what the heck, “Why not jack the train?”

Holy crap, it actually worked. So I drove a train in GTA:SA, which may be old news to many, but I rarely if ever read strategy guides or look for cheats and spoilers – that is a story for another day.

I love finding little things like this on my own, and GTA:SA has a ton of these hidden elements. This is one reason it takes me so long to finish games like GTA titles and Final Fantasy titles – I just like to keep on digging to see if I can find all the dirty little secrets.

Anyway, I am really digging GTA:SA it is extremely deep, allows for a ton of creativity, is well-balanced, and has tons and tons of fun things to uncover.

Share

Xevious 3D/G+

Most of you are thinking, “What the hell?” But yes, there it is; a discussion of Xevious 3D/G+ is taking over the blog.

In an attempt to clean out my gaming library (see previous post) I am throwing some older games in my library into my play rotation to discern what should stay and what should eBay. I did not play Xevious 3D/G+ a ton when it came out (way back in 1996!), but I picked it up right away because I was (still am) a huge Xevious fan. Of course I have always sucked at Xevious, but that is a different story.

When I picked up Xevious 3D/G+ I had Raiden Project in my library. Actually I still have Raiden Project, which is a very under rated shooter and certainly worth its own blog entry, but I digress. I liked Raiden Project better than Xevious 3D/G+, so I never made it more than about half way through the game. Dust it has collected ever more.

Xevious 3D/G+ is basically a 3D version of Xevious. The graphics are very dated by today’s standards, and I expect that the graphics are pretty lame when compared to its contemporary PlayStation titles. The sound is loopy in a strange Japanese shooter sort of way; catchy, but loopy. The gameplay is actually decent; plenty of power-ups, interesting enemies, and an assortment of boss ships. Setting the game on easy is a sure fire way to eat up level after level, but moving to hard is an exercise in frustration for my current (lack there of) skills.

I am not going to do a review as such; instead it is just enough to say that Joshua and I had a good time with the Xevious 3D/G+. Joshua calls almost every space shooter game a “space rangers” game. I have no idea when or how that started. Actually I think he just could not say Slipheed, which was the first shooter that I purchased for him, so we started calling it “space rangers” and thus the shooter alias was born.

The funny thing with our Xevious 3D/G+ experience was that the game does not use the analog stick, just standard d-pad fun. It took Joshua a few minutes to adjust, but after that we had a good time.

My personal opinion is that Xevious 3D/G+ has no significant place in gaming history unless you happen to be a huge Xevious fan, and have to have every game in the series. Not that Xevious 3D/G+ is bad, it is actually average, it is just that the PlayStation had many better shooters such as Gradius Deluxe Pack. Now that is a game that I wish I never sold.

Back Xevious 3D/G+; I think I will hold on to the game a while longer, because it is a cheap (read free) way for me to give Joshua some new gaming experiences.

Share