Dragon Age Inquisition - The return of the Demo?

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - July 15, 2015

Has the demo returned!? Origin has popped up a trial mode for Dragon Age Inquisition allowing you to download the game, play unlimited multiplayer and have access to 6 hours playthrough of the single-player campaign. Oh I hope this will set a trend, we need demos, not pre-orders, but... that is for another deeper topic to talk about. So essentially the Dragonslayer DLC Multiplayer, with weekend events, for free? Six hours of the single-p

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Thank you, Mr. Iwata

Posted By: Melissa - July 14, 2015

Hey Gamers, This is a pretty personal post for me and I think a lot of us out there.  The world lost a huge influence the other day, Satoru Iwata, the CEO of Nintendo, and many of us are reeling from the news.  He believed in gaming together and that the joy of playing is what makes a great game.  All over the world, gamers are in mourning.  Including this one. When Iwata started as CEO, I was graduating high school.&nbs

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This Navi finally gets her Link - Gaming Couples Cosplay

Posted By: Melissa - July 13, 2015

Growing up, I thought to be or date a gamer girl was simply socially unacceptable.  In direct opposition to what the stereotype of the response to gamer girls claims, all I got was “friend-zoned”.  In high school, I wanted to date and specifically wanted to date a gamer so that I wouldn’t have to worry about all of the traditional date night rigamarole - the nails, the hair, the small talk, the stress of coming up with

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Witcher 3 The Wild Hunt Review

Posted By: Michael Zarwalski - July 10, 2015

I recently had the opportunity to experience the hype of The Witcher 3: The Wild Hunt firsthand, and take an in-depth look into its vast expanse of gameplay, its massive open world and its breath-taking story. The Witcher 3 once again follows Geralt, this time on his quest to destroy the Wild Hunt, a group of spectres that remind me of the four horsemen of the apocalypse (they are even referred to as the “Red Riders”). As well as t

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Darkest Dungeon Patch "The Hound and Corpse"

Posted By: GamerDating Team - July 09, 2015

Darkest Dungeon is an early access game which has made a splash in the dungeon crawlers. Darkest Dungeon is introducing its latest patch July 15th bringing a new class, the Houndmaster, new features, integrations and constant ongoing balances. After the July update, the next stop for us will be the Cove, a completely new dungeon with it’s own bosses, monsters, curios, traps, and obstacles! If things weren’t salty enough, get

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Games Are The Solution, Not the Problem

Posted By: Melissa - July 08, 2015

“Video games ruined my last relationship.” Working for a gamer dating site, gaming guilt comes up all the time.  It breaks my heart to hear the repeated stories of normal relationship challenges being misconstrued as the inevitable fault of video games when it is the games that can help us through those tough situations.  To date a gamer is the same as dating anyone who has a passion for something and there are even a few

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The Witcher 3 Patch 1.07 coming soon!

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - July 07, 2015

The Witcher 3 have released information on the next big patch. Patch 1.07 is bringing: A new, alternative (optional) movement response mode for Geralt. A player stash for storing items, available in various locations throughout the game. Stash locations are marked on the player's map. Crafting and alchemy components no longer add to the overall inventory weight. Books are now placed in a dedicat

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Update 2.3 - Optimisation and fixes!

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - July 01, 2015

GamerDating goes mobile with full optimisation in version 2.3. We are pleased to announce GamerDating version 2.3 which brings full mobile optimisation on both Android and IOS. We’ve resolved those annoying bugs with the cache for both Firefox and Chrome making the site faster and more reliable, as well as improved the UX in certain places. This patch has many improvements including: Game Library has improved system of searching, s

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Total War: Warhammer Information

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 30, 2015

Total War: Warhammer is coming, and the hype is growing. I personally (Alex) cannot wait for the release and I wait with hope, and fear I will be disappointed. Yet here I am watching videos, reading interviews and getting even more hyped. If you've yet to see the scripted battle of Total War: Warhammer check out the cinematic announcement trailer over on the Total War Youtube Channel which introduces the armies available.  I've

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Guild Wars 2 Review

Posted By: Joe "Xirta" - June 29, 2015

Guild Wars 2 is an immersive, fantasy-based MMORPG which allows the player to progress in their own story-based solo play in a persistent world whilst also allowing the addition of missions and events that can be played solo or with others (called “instances”). The story of Guild Wars 2 revolves around dragons, which are bad, corrupted beings that like to raise undead and corrupt the land. These dragons threaten the world of Tyria,

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XCom 2 Gameplay Trailer

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 26, 2015

Firaxis Games brought a demo of XCOM 2 to E3 and we saw a quick overview of the video with commentary. Now they have released the short gameplay video.  The single mission comes across as a great interactive cinematic where the story picks up from 10 years after the time humanity surrendered to the alien invasion. With full interaction of the previous Xcom games combined with more cutscenes and an ever evolving narrative it

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Drink Water, RedBull and get DLC

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 25, 2015

Recently RedBull and Destiny paired up in a marketing move which sent ripples across the web. In a move seen as a joke, the dark times and a good idea has set off varying responses and some are just brilliant. Destiny is a PS4 Exclusive FPSMMO and RedBull are offering cans which you can buy, get codes and redeem your in game products. RedBull is offering a "Focused Light" a one-time consumable Bonus XP buff which increases all

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Terraria 1.3 Official Trailer

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 24, 2015

Terraria is only a week away, and even though the development team did not have time to make a video, the community yet again stepped up and worked with the team to create the next official trailer. Terraria is a shining success in the sea of early access crowd funded games which can show that developers can succeed. With each patch comes new features, new improved functionality and at times feels like an entirely new improved game. Check o

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Albion Online New Trailer and Summer Alpha

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 23, 2015

The big Summer Alpha will finally start on the 29th June. The world of Albion will open its ports for both seasoned and first-time settlers to populate it and experience the vast amount of new features and improvements implemented since the last Winter Alpha in January/February. You can our experience when Pyran went an experienced the game fulltime in our early experiences. Monday, the 29th of June Albion Online is a Free-to-Play

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Call of Duty Black Ops III E3 Co-operative gameplay

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 22, 2015

Call of Duty: Black Ops 3 cooperative campaign has been shared online, the cooperative tutorial seen at the E3 Sony Playstation booth is now available for a gander. Call of Duty: Black Ops 3 seems to touch more into the dark side of the future with technology lending a serious hand to the full on combat. What is cool is the game seems to be designed for four-player online co-op or solo play.  Players will encounter epic cin

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E3 Thursday Recap and End!

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 19, 2015

This is the last recap of E3 and for more indepth E3 news check out the E3 Expo site. E3 has been an interesting array of announcements, rehashes, promises and full fledged marketing. However amongst all the announcements we've had some great news. Destiny's The Taken King expansion with a continued story. Interesting talk with GameSpot and the creator of the Oculus about the future of VR. To take some of the pret

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E3 Wednesday Recap

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 18, 2015

E3 brought us some interesting trailers, announcements, and confirmations about games yesterday, the features and DLC have continued to take E3 as a strong exciting year. We saw more information on Horizon: Zero Dawn, an APRG featuring a female protagonist. An AWESOME trailer for Kingdom Come: Deliverance something which you can tell is something I'm interested in personally! (Alex) A very nice gameplay demo of Metal Gear Solid

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E3 Tuesday Recap

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 17, 2015

E3 Officially kicked off today and released a torrent of great news from Nintendo, Square Enix and some cool bits of news about Star Wars Battlefront. Many news sites are now sharing their hands on experience with multiple games as the show floors have opened up. GameSpot has been reporting and these are few of the top bits of news: The Wii U Star Fox was officially named as Star Fox Zero, Super Mario Maker is coming in

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E3 Monday Recap

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 16, 2015

E3 continued on Monday, and after following the slam dunk of Bethesda it was a hard gig to headline. Collecting the information from E3 again we list the top news here: The next Gear of War was confirmed. Sony confirmed The Last Guardian will release next year. Call of Duty will have DLC debut on PlayStation. The next Mass Effect has a name and it's Andromeda. Dark Souls 3 will be the last one in the ser

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E3 Kick off and Sunday Recap

Posted By: Gamerdating Team - June 15, 2015

E3 kicked off yesterday and continues over the next few days to bring us new releases, announcements and games. Straight from E3's own mouth we have gathered the list of the top announcements, reveals and hot news straight from E3's Sunday. Dishonored 2 was officially revealed and it looks awesome, especially with the protagonist. Doom showed off plenty of gameplay. Fallout 4 announced to be coming a lot sooner than

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Dungeons and Dragons: Dark Alliance Review

Posted By: Ryan - July 20, 2021

Game

Dungeons and Dragons: Dark Alliance could have been one of the best games on Game Pass, if it were finished.

With Game Pass’ wide customer base, the global success of Dungeons and Dragons, and the simplicity of the hack and slash genre, it really wouldn’t have taken much to produce a competent and successful entry into the Dark Alliance franchise and yet, somehow, Tuque Games didn’t.

Drizzt is an iconic and brilliant character.

Drizzt is an iconic and brilliant character... in the books.

I’m going to avoid making Dungeons and Dragons-based jokes in an effort to not mystify readers who may not be familiar with the tabletop role-playing game, but I will be mentioning it a lot; consider yourself warned.

Released to kick off the Summer of Drizzt, and featuring Drizzt Do’Urden (the main character in a long-running series of fantasy novels by R.A. Salvatore), Dungeons and Dragons: Dark Alliance (I’ll be using DA  to refer to the game from hereon in) is the long awaited successor the Baldur’s Gate: Dark Alliance series. Ditching those games’ isometric view for a more common over-the-shoulder third-person camera brings the player closer into the action, for good or ill, and allows you to admire the vibrant textures and impressive particle effects that the Unreal engine is capable of.

It also, unfortunately, gives you a perfect close-up of stiff, or missing, animations, the regular clipping of objects where they meet the environment or each other and the questionable artistic choices made in the design of some armour pieces and character models. The developers have opted for a realistic design ethos which does help ground characters and the environment but lends the more monstrous characters, and magical armours, a slightly cartoonish effect that detracts from the rest of the realism.

The design is bad and the gameplay is bad.

Somehow this design got signed off…

As one would expect from cutscenes rendered with the Unreal Engine, they are visually a treat to look at and you’ll have plenty of time to admire each frame as they stutter across your screen. Playing on an Xbox One X, I had the weird experience of each successive cutscene playing with a steadily decreasing frame rate. I would put this down to a memory leak or something, but this persisted over several play sessions, no matter how far into the session I was before mysteriously clearing up as I neared the end of the game.

So far, so bad.

The voice acting and sound design are both perfectly serviceable and one of the few areas of the game that I didn’t find anything majorly at fault. The cast do a good job of selling their characters’ personalities and Drizzt’s opening narration to each level is well-delivered, as are the incidental conversations between NPCs and most of the player character’s combat barks.

Much as with the sound, DA’s user interface and user experience are both perfectly serviceable. Sure, some information is buried in the menus but almost everything is explained well and easily re-discovered if you want to refresh your memory about something. The trouble is the ‘almost’ in that previous sentence. Once you start a level, referred to inconsistently as Acts, you are no longer able to check the correct button combinations to trigger the special moves you can buy in the lobby area—which also serves as a shop and rewards hub.

The button that opens your character sheet in the lobby area (the ‘View’ button on an Xbox One controller) opens a menu that provides mission objectives and an explanation of the various symbols that flash up on screen once you’re playing the game proper. Unfortunately, that explanation only gives you the name of the effect tied to the symbol, not what that effect actually does and, as of yet, I still have not found any resource in game to explain the many, MANY conditions you may be subject to during play.

It's as if the game is still in pre-alpha, no consistency.

Ah yes, the true D&D experience: skill trees with tiny bonuses..

But what about the actual game itself, how have Tuque Games failed to produce a competent and successful entry into the Dark Alliance franchise? For a start they marketed it as a hack and slash brawler, when what they’ve released is a Dark Souls-style game with the serial numbers filed off. Admittedly, I played through this game solo and picked possibly the worst character to do that with, but with basic enemies taking upwards of 30 seconds to kill, a healing animation that you are locked into for around 3 seconds and a targeting system that may as well not exist, as well as the forward movement triggered by ANY attack, I felt like the game wanted me to fail and try again with different tactics. But why Dark Souls in particular?

Not since 2011’s Skyrim has the death rate been as sky high.

I’ll get there, don’t worry. First, I need to talk about the difficulty. Each Act has up to six difficulty levels, with slowly increasing rewards for playing at higher difficulties. If you’re planning on playing this solo, you’ll likely be playing at the lower end of the scale where everything is trivial. You’ll be doing this because if you raise the difficulty even one level, basic enemies start presenting a large threat when encountered in groups (which they always are) and elite enemies/bosses become near impossible challenges with attacks that can stunlock you or remove two-thirds of your health bar at once.  The intention here is clearly that you should not be playing this game solo and that you should be taking advantage of the ability to resurrect fallen allies.

The whole system quickly became meaningless.

Hopefully, I’ve demonstrated that’s very easy to die here, whether through being locked into an animation (once an animation starts, you are committed to that action) at the wrong time or just a poorly-balanced encounter. Your reward for clearing certain area of enemies is the ability to take a short rest. This acts as a checkpoint, refills your consumables and respawns everything but bosses. The thing is, I figured out pretty quickly that the whole system is meaningless. If you opt not to take the short rest, you gain a bonus to your loot rarity chances (yes, there is random loot in this game, more on that below) but you have to start back at the beginning of the Act. The only problem with this ‘decision’ is that your progress in the Act is saved meaning that if you opt not to take the rest, you gain the bonus to loot rarity in exchange for simply running back to where you died. Everything respawns as if you had rested (including reinforcements that arrive in waves the first time you encounter them), you get your health and consumables back AND you get better loot.

On top of all of this, certain moves lower your maximum stamina, which is used to pull off attacks, moves and dodges. This, in itself, isn’t a problem, the problem is that these moves just randomly trigger. As an example, my character of choice had a move tied to tapping the movement stick and the light attack button that frequently triggered when I was using her ranged attack on the move. This resulted in either me flying forwards and committing to a melee attack I was trying to avoid or moving backwards without actually attacking and losing stamina for doing so.

Stamina and controls feel glitched or random

The game tells you monsters have stamina and can be executed when prone. What it actually means is you can do a SLIGHTLY more powerful attack when certain enemies are hunched over slightly.

This results in a gameplay loop of very slow, carefully managed combat that feels like the developers were halfway through making a different game when they were told to make it a hack and slash brawler. Again, some of this opinion might be because I played solo, but in my defence the animations aren’t fast, attacks at anything but the lowest difficulty don’t deal much damage—and the game apparently scales enemy health based on the number of players—and if you run out of stamina you can’t do anything for a good couple of seconds as that bar fills up.

The whole gameplay options starts to feel slow and labourious.

If you do manage to get through all of that, you can take side paths and poke around hidden alcoves to find treasure chests filled with loot that increases your stats a tiny amount. This, I’ll be honest, was where I started losing interest in the game. The clunky, half-baked combat I could excuse because it was clearly trying to be good and did feel pretty enjoyable on the rare occasions it worked flawlessly, but the armour sets with their set bonuses, tiny stat increases and sheer randomness went a bit too far.

I’m not sure this could be called AI.

Ordinarily I’d be fine with it: it’s an rpg, that’s what you expect. But this is a DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS video-game. D&D is not about obsessively hoarding armour in the hopes of gaining an extra 3% Ultimate Charge or 2% acid resistance and it certainly isn’t about managing stamina and being killed by goblins after three hits. Once I noticed this discrepancy with the franchise, I noticed more that individually could be classed as lore inconsistencies but, when taken as a whole, paint a different picture. See, I think the developers wanted to make a different game and were told to slap a D&D story on it (which they did with R.A. Salvatore’s assistance).

As a side note, the writing here is pretty good. It’s bare bones and conveyed mostly through short snippets of narration before you start an Act with each boss getting their own cutscene, as well as a wide variety of genuinely interesting and well-acted incidental dialogue between enemies as you creep up on them.

The problem is that the writing outside of the story, and the many, MANY lore collectibles, feels like its supposed to be a generic fantasy game. D&D terms like short rest and Challenge Rating are used (although the development roadmap refers to ‘difficulty rankings’), but the ubiquitous potions of healing are simply called health potion (you didn’t misread that, I got two health potion every time), obvious UI options for Main Quest and Side Quest are called Main Objective and Optional (there isn’t a word missing there) and monsters that regain health constantly regain their health, even when hit with damage types that, in the D&D rule set, prevents them from regenerating.

Even the UI and display feels like a mobile game.

I don’t know why I want to see the current loot I’ve found as it shows me at the end of the Act anyway.

Whilst I was streaming this, one of my viewers remarked that it felt like a mobile game and, honestly, I can see why. I’ve already mentioned the buggy controls and graphics, the stiff animations and the generic fantasy feel. I haven’t mentioned the menu bugs that tell me I have something new to read (I don’t), the complete lack of in-game map, or even the fact that the developers introduce a puzzle mechanic, teach you about that mechanic and then change it for the next puzzle without altering any of the visual cues—most puzzles are solved by turning all the pressure plates on anyway. On top of all of this, the end of every Act has three tally screens, none of which are skippable and each of which is excessively long. The intention is clearly to provide stats for co-op players to compare but it would have been nice to skip them entirely in solo, offline play.

It feels like a mobile game.

On the plus side, there is a lot of game here. Even playing on the easiest difficulty, it took nearly 20 hours to beat the game solo, although if you’re playing co-op you will likely get through it much faster than I did. The main replayability here comes from the random loot system (the presentation of which makes me feel like there were supposed to be loot boxes in the game at some point) as well as the numerous lore-based collectibles scattered throughout the sometimes too-long Acts, and character levelling system that blocks off moves and feats until certain level thresholds are met. Handily the game does give you approximate indications of how long each Act will take to complete and those are mostly accurate. Finally, pretty much any game is better played co-operatively, although you will have to play online (with limited cross-platform support); local multiplayer was cut for the game’s launch and is being added later.

You get these looking great in quick action sequences.

Three awesome looking bad guys... then the cut scene ends and they stand motionless.

If you’re looking a for a long-ish game to play with up to four friends, and can put up with the core gameplay loop I dedicated too many words to above, you’ll probably enjoy this. At £34.99 —or ‘free’ with Game Pass—, it’s a decently priced, buggy experience that feels unfinished and definitely has an identity crisis going on about what it really wants to be. Unfortunately, those bugs, that gameplay loop and its almost complete separation from the brand it’s supposed to be promoting (Dungeons and Dragons) do bog down the gameplay, particularly if you’re playing solo.

Personally, I would recommend avoiding this unless you’re a) going to play with friends or b) willing to see how bad it really gets.

Watch the arrow as it leaves the bowstring. Turns out light kills people, not sharpened projectiles. Seriously though, this happens with every shot, not just Catti-brie’s Ultimate.

In one word - "Avoid."

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