#TELNET #BBS #90s #GAMES #USURPER #USURPER-REBORN #ALPHA

Usurper-Reborn (ALPHA) Available for play at A-Net Online!

Has local and online mutiplayer! Check it out!
(along w/ tons of other games!)

https://a-net.online

bbs.a-net-online - telnet:1337 ssh:1338

Running on A-Net Door Game Server

Sigh

I have once more failed to beat Usurper on the pharaonic level.

#chess #Usurper

When you're not getting fucked in the way you like but you are definitely getting fucked

#meme #memes #ushavance #jdvance #politics #america #infidelity #drama #shitpost #vancepost #erikakirk #cheating #usurper

New titles from worlds you love! #Usurper #DarkMatter #DuneTheMachineCrusade from:
#DHarlanWilson
#KatheKoja
#KevinJAnderson
#BrianHerbert

Check out our site for all things bookish!!

#TELNET #BBS #90'S #GAMES #DIALUP #CHAT #MRC #IRC
#OOK #YANKEETRADER #PLANETS #USURPER

Here are just a few amazing games playing at A-Net Online BBSes.

https://a-net-online.lol
http://mystic.a-net-onlne.lol
https://a-net-online.lol/x
https://a-net-online.lol/sf

Synchronet BBS
Telnet: a-net.online Port: 23 SSH:22 RLogin: 513
Mystic BBS
Telnet: mystic-anet.online Port: 23 SSH:22 RLogin: 513

Synchronet Linux BBS
Telnet: x.a-net.online Port: 2323
Rlogin: 5513

Spitfire BBS
Telnet: sf.a-net.online Port 2323

Home: A-Net Online

Lately I have been playing Usurper

Usurper is available on Steam.

#chess #Steam #Usurper

Usurper on Steam

A turn-based roguelike deckbuilder where your King is your strongest weapon. Play cards from your deck to drop units onto the battlefield and checkmate your opponent. Build your Deck, Upgrade your Ruler, and Claim the Throne.

And so Elon the Usurper assures us that this is all perfectly legal. We all voted for Trump. Now Trump just wants to do whatever Elon wants to do.

#elonmusk #trump #usurper #lilx

https://open.substack.com/pub/letsmakethempay/p/can-you-define-usurper?r=2brusa&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=false

Can You Define "Usurper"?

A Critical Examination of Musk in the White House

I bask in the glow of #victory having beaten the Overlord and the complete Shogunate deck in campaign mode in #Usurper

#games #gaming #chess(ish)

Weekly Game Log: 2024-12-02


This week I took ownership of a "Steam Deck" device, for mobile computing and video game playing. So a lot of my playing was informed by my testing of that.

Outside of the Steam Deck, I jumped on the 
Atlyss train. It's a fast-paced action RPG in early access. Its gameplay skews slightly towards a co-op online experience (single and multiplayer modes are similar, and you just respawn at a checkpoint with the worldstate remaining.) I find it a bit clumsy, the graphical depictions of the player and enemies tend to be loose suggestions of their actual location. However it is also quite simple and fun, and you rarely get bogged down.

The main selling point of 
Atlyss is its character creation and customisation systems, which are geared toward creating fursonas with extremely pronounced features, and dressing them up. In this regard, the game excels far more than its limited four classes suggest. Though the game supports purely cosmetic apparel appearing in the stead of functional armor, there seems to be a slightly convoluted system behind it, which is a shame.

Usurper is a deck building/chess hybrid, where you optionally place a piece from your deck each turn before your actual chess move, this is later augmented by pieces beyond the standard chess set. The game is quite an original idea, but I found it a bit vague in its instruction. More frustratingly the game suggests picking a difficulty based on Chess ability, but the gameplay here is quite different, leading to an unnecessarily difficult experience.

Similarly 
Solitomb is one of the many Balatro inspired spins on traditional card games. It's similar to regular klondike solitaire, but suits are replaced by symbols representing damage/armor/monsters/etc. I didn't play much of it because I quickly found I was in the wrong state of mind. I did find it quite unintuitive though.

Caves of Qud is still exceptionally excellent. Surprisingly, so is the playability its controller layout. That said, there's a lot of surprisingly complex tasks with extremely intuitive bindings, but "Move around" is not one of them for some reason. Without opting into the tutorial, it does give a bit of the old Dwarf Fortress "Cannot build bed need bed" vibe the first time you plug in a controller. That said, its still one of the best games ever.

XENOTILT is a pinball game that has been in early access for a year or so, and recently reached version 1.0. The game has one very complex table (way beyond the possibilities of real life) with three tiers, and a vaguely Giger-esque sci-fi theme. It has an endless array of challenges and power-ups, and perfectly nails the FM synth music and grainy speaker that a real table would have. The gameplay is surprisingly simple, you control flippers and use the controller stick/arrows to nudge the table. There is a small gimmick where cradling the ball on the flipper and nudging down causes turrets to fire at obstacles. I got hooked on this game way more than I expected too, and have played multiple hours. However, I do find there are situations where the ball is ejected in preventable situations, but the camera hasn't caught up in time. And the "nudge" functionality seems to not be that realistic, only affecting the ball in certain locations.

I also revisited 
Demon's Tilt (XENOTILT's predecessor), for comparison. And while that game is still good, I still just think "neat idea, fine for what it is" about it. It doesn't seem nearly as polished as XENOTILT is.

I resumed a four year old save of 
Intergalactic Fishing and was able to immediately back into the swing of it, peacefully fishing and solving interstellar conspiracy theories. It's a simple top-down fishing game, where you float your B.O.A.T around a lake casting rods and chatting with other anglers. The controls are very simple, left click to cast and reel, right click to set the hook to snare a catch, and 90% of the complexity is in the tetris-like lure designer. Then you teleport to a lake elsewhere in the galaxy if you get bored. The killer final touch of the game is a convoluted plot about environmental disaster and corporate malfeasance, which is played deadly seriously in the game.

I also played some more runs of 
80 Days, a game I have finished multiple times. It's a text-driven narrative adventure that is also a steampunk adaptation of Jules Verne's Around the World in 80 Days. It's still excellent, the sheer amount of text written for the endless variations on routes and choices of actions is outstanding. Also, this time I got an achievement for fucking an airship.

Steam Deck notes

I generally recommend the 
Steam Deck as a portable video game device. Particularly if you have a large Steam library, though the SteamOS (an Arch Linux variant) installation underneath is easily accessible if you want something that doesn't interact directly with Steam.

My biggest criticisms would be


There are a few processes (updates/installations/etc) where it was apparently deemed acceptable for the screen to go black and unresponsive for an extended period.


The 
GREAT ON DECK certification seems to only care that everything can be performed using the Steam Deck's controllers, and not whether that layout is actually usable

November Game of the Month

XENOTILT

By default I guess. Most other games didn't grab me at all this month.

Games on Deck

The below games were all from the 
GREAT ON DECK certified section of my library.

XENOTILT - Absolutely fantastic. Controls perfectly and performs well. Graphics seem to have been custom redrawn to fit the resolution perfectly

Demon's Tilt - As above.

Balatro - Functions well. The filters on the graphics seem to require squinting awkwardly.

Another World - Abysmal. I pressed down on the control pad twice and that was enough to quit the game without warning.

80 Days - Works OK-ish, until it doesn't. Uses the touch pad in lieu of mouse more than it should. Trying to drag and drop in the shops seems completely broken.

Caves of Qud - Works as well as the control scheme discussed earlier does.

Intergalactic Fishing - Works kind of OK. Boat is controllable, but the clickable icons are way too small for the level of precision.

All Games Played


Tetrachroma: Good


Deadlock: Good


Atlyss: GREAT


Usurper: OK


Solitomb: OK


Caves of Qud: GREAT


XENOTILT: GREAT (Notable)


Demon's Tilt: Good


Intergalactic Fishing: GREAT


80 Days: GREAT