Jump to content

Daniel_Doyce

Member
  • Posts

    684
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1
  • Feedback

    0%

Posts posted by Daniel_Doyce

  1. 2 hours ago, Gaia Gensouki said:

    Do you still know the locations of these hidden flags? Those would be a huge help for future personal attempts.

     

    That's actually what I've been doing most of the time. Make a lot of money selling, buying and re-selling goods until my pockets are full. Then I buy a bunch of mercenaries and invade an enemy country. I use the survivors as farmes, craftsmen and of course for defense. I then wait until I get my defenses up and earn enough money to buy another army to invade another country. This takes quite a bit of time and gets very repetitive, but it has been pretty reliable so far.

    However, the problem is that my leader is eventually running out points so that I have to train him in order to do something again. This is a bit tedious. On top of that, I don't like handing my provinces over to one of my leaders/princes. Because in the worst case scenario, they're going to rebel against me, which is obviously awful and a real dealbreaker. But even in the best cases, where they're part of my family and won't betray me, they're also not really adding anything useful to my empire. They don't give me money and barely increase their forces. It's really a waste. So I prefer to give orders for all of my provinces every turn, which unfortunately takes a lot of time.

    I'm sure there's much better stragies out there, but I'm new at Koei strategy games and this was the best that I could come up with so far.

    Yeah the body point thing is a huge PITA. I'd say put your best people in the territories adjacent to enemies, set them to aggressive, and see what happens. Agree on not giving non-family members any power, but make sure you arrange as many marriages as you can.

     

    • Thanks 1
  2. 1 hour ago, Gaia Gensouki said:

    I'm unfortunately still at eight countries. I found a relatively safe method to expand my territory, but it takes long and gets a bit boring after a while. I ended up playing a few games of Master of Orion 2 instead. I'm sorry.

     

    @T-Pac

    The gamefaqs site for Xevious shows all of the 16 maps: https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/nes/579616-xevious/faqs

    I only ever made it until 9, because of those stupid enemies, that separate into many smaller homing projectiles.

    Ok, I didn't know if you hunkered down on a bit more than you expected and got into a One Man One Jar-type situation, but it sounds like you're making progress. Don't forget to make those stupid crafts and sell them for cash too.

    • Like 1
  3. You can run the created files through Handbrake and there are some settings to correct interlace issues. I ripped a bunch of hard-to-find softcore VHS tapes a while back and gave the output a run through Handbrake too.

    As for vinyl, is it something that hasn't been ripped already? I can find even the most obscure classical recordings transferred by obsessive nerds on YT at this point and grab em with Jdownloader2. I imagine that's the case for other genres too.

  4. 4 hours ago, T-Pac said:

    image.png.ec6cec929063c3ecd29540570f982620.png

    Finished reading Stories by O. Henry, a collection of the author’s short works written between 1900 and 1910.

      Hide contents

    O. Henry’s fiction is defined by its twist-endings, which to my knowledge are often panned by literary critics for being “low-brow”. But I think dismissing the medium of short stories and the trope of twist endings discredits their value as fun, casual entertainment. And even still - that takes nothing away from the powerful themes and often very moving plotlines that O. Henry crafts. For example - “The Gift of the Magi” wouldn't be half as successful if it weren’t for its format. The brevity of these works and the punch of their climaxes only serve to distill O. Henry’s messages into exceedingly approachable packages. 

    And I think a key to the approachability of his stories is a mastery of archetypes. O. Henry instantly transports you to a defined place and time, surrounded by people you know, thanks to his reliance on stock characterization. Yet he still expertly develops those characters into their own personalities once he’s eased the reader into the comfort of a base familiarity. One of my favorite stories introduces a wild-west ruffian who scoffs at his old partner-in-crime for going soft after getting married and settling down, but O. Henry toys with our expectations of such an archetype by ultimately reversing the two principal characters’ roles. Another story even manages to imbue and develop familiar personalities to dollar bills as the plot evolves from their perspective.

    Anticipating the climactic twist at the end of each story could easily spoil the surprises in theory, but O. Henry always leads toward a satisfyingly appropriate conclusion without betraying so much information along the way as to make the ending predictable. There’s such a range between tragedy and comedy that you never know if these characters will come-out for the better or the worse when all is said and done. I’d certainly say that I came out for the better by picking up this book, and I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend some O. Henry shorts to anyone looking for some light, fun reading.


     

    He had a very specific niche, but did it spectacularly. Although I admit I once bought a compilation of his complete works, and stopped about halfway through since it was getting a bit tedious.

    I did walk by the drugstore he owned or just worked at (forgot which exactly) for about 6 years of my professional career, whenever I'd go to lunch on the main drag in his hometown. There was a place that served massive fried burritos and I'd get double steak with a huge side of rice and beans that would absolutely destroy my GI tract for the rest of the afternoon.

  5. On 4/28/2024 at 4:50 PM, mbd39 said:

    Games like this are more fun with two players or in small doses as a single player game.

    Well, yeah, I don't think anyone is going to have an 80-game goon session of Bases Loaded. 5 games a day over about 2 weeks is all I could take.

    Nice humblebrag about having a friend BTW 🙂

  6. On 12/14/2021 at 12:36 PM, koifish said:

    I didn't know that there was a facebook group for NintendoAge. Guess it makes enough sense.

    Facebook is lame. The cool NA kids are in the Friendster group.

  7. One of the moments of my generation where everyone remembers where they were is when that chase was televised live.

    Also, "If I Did It" was one of the ballsiest book ideas in human history.

    The Frogmen pilot was on YT for quite a while, but looks like it was taken down at some point.

  8. 15 hours ago, scaryice said:

    We were one day short of the fastest time to 650 games cleared (4/9 vs 4/8 in 2015). We could still beat the fastest time to clear the whole thing though, which is June 12th. 2 months to beat the last 26 games?

    Well.. I have beaten Bases Loaded before with the exploit, so I guess I could slog through it again. Is anyone actively working on it?

  9. 20 hours ago, PII said:

    I think you forgot to drink Chartreuse while eating fettuccine alfredo and dove bars while also being in the hot tub at the time... 😉 

    Well, to be fair, I smoke cigars and watch retro softcore nudie vids all day anyway, especially now that I retired this year.

    Anyway, Romance of the Three Kingdoms 2 is done. Since @Gaia Gensouki is doing Genghis Khan, that may be it for me for this year.

     

     

    IMG_0087.jpg

    • Like 4
  10. 1 hour ago, BriGuy82 said:

    Made it to the final boss in Starship Hector should have it beat soon hopefully. I've probably played this game for close to 20 hours overall so far. It took me FOREVER to clear the end of that 2nd level consistently.

    That's impressive. Played it for about 5 minutes once and it beat my ass hard.

    • Like 2
  11. 41 minutes ago, Estil said:

    I always thought the term premium regarding silver/gold coins/bullion was a bit odd.  Am I buying silver or am I buying insurance?  I mean I guess you gotta call it something but I'm more used to these kind of premiums:

    Well, words can have more than one meaning, ya know.

    Are you interested in bullion or collectible coins? Because they are two different things. You can get bags of cull Franklins to just get melt value coins, but the high end deep cameo proof Franklins command a premium even over regular proofs as truly rare (and beautiful) coins.

  12. Depends where you want to go with the hobby. Searching through rolls is fun, but pointless nowadays for silver. You'll get more checking the Coinstar reject bin. There's a huge spectrum from that to collecting slabbed DCAM Franklin halves, which look so amazing. Franklin halves are even prettier than Walking Liberty halves IMO.

    I'd consider straight bullion accumulation a different beast altogether, and not really a hobby. You can just get silver at some small markup above spot from places like APMEX

×
×
  • Create New...