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kingpotato

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  1. Like
    kingpotato got a reaction from StaceyPowers in Why do some people think Bioshock Infinite isn't really a "Bioshock" Game?   
    I also dont get why some people think why Infinite is not a bioshock game, probably because its not entirely about rapture but still as they mentioned on Infinite, there is always a man and there is always a city. And well the gameplay is basically the same in all 3 games
  2. Like
    kingpotato got a reaction from StaceyPowers in "Games as movies"   
    News flash!!
    HBO is making a series about The Last of Us, with the creators of Chernobyl. 
    The Chernobyl mini series on HBO was pretty good in my opinion
  3. Like
    kingpotato reacted to DC in Official Prize Recommendation Thread   
    Gotcha, will do things like this very soon.
    Of course!
    The store just wasn't working out so we decided to get rid of it and revert to solely giveaways.
  4. Like
    kingpotato got a reaction from DylanC in Last movie watched?   
    Gravity - 8/10
    Encounters of the Third kind - 7/10
     
  5. Haha
    kingpotato reacted to The Blackangel in I'm gonna pop my cherry   
    I've finally decided to take the plunge. When I post again on this thread I'll no longer be a virgin.
    I'm going to play Skyrim for the first time. I'll let everyone know how it goes.
  6. Thanks
    kingpotato reacted to DC in VGR Member of the Month - February 2020   
    Congrats @kingpotato - points awarded!
  7. Like
    kingpotato reacted to skyfire in Final Fantasy 7 Remake Side Quest   
    There seems to be some additional side quests and improvement in abilities that are being shown by demos and the gameplays. Also the FF7 remake has demo for PS4 out too. 
     
  8. Thanks
    kingpotato reacted to skyfire in Good PS1 emulator on Android   
    I see so you may need to get in some emulators forums with the request for that specific game. Often some program authors may see that thread and test it out or find way to clear the bug. 
  9. Like
    kingpotato reacted to skyfire in The Walking Dead   
    For me the show was only good upto the negan saga. Then it just dropped flat. I mean we have boring lives too. Current drag looks like that boring churn of life when nothing exciting happens. Even the fear the walking dead is a bit dragged lately. 
  10. Like
    kingpotato reacted to StaceyPowers in Bioshock 2: What Happened to Delta?   
    One of the biggest giveaways that he wasn’t working on BioShock 2 is the vending machines. There’s no “Welcome to the CIRCUS of VALUES!” I was amused to find out that is actually Ken Levine’s voice. So, since he wasn’t there in the second game, no vending machine voice. His voice is back for some of the vending machines in Infinite (i.e. “I appreciate a woman who appreciates QUALITY!”)
    Anyway, did you finish Infinite? What did you think? And are you playing Burial at Sea? I adored Infinite and could probably write a novel about why, and I loved the ending, as bittersweet and ambiguous as it was. Burial at Sea I have mixed feelings about. It’s definitely worth playing, but I have issues with it.
  11. Like
    kingpotato reacted to StaceyPowers in Bioshock Infinite Blew My Mind   
    Hah, ignore my questions on the other thread about whether you finished. Obviously you did :)

    I'm glad you loved the game. I feel it's a masterpiece on so many levels I don't even know where to begin. I felt like the ending of Infinite was so victorious--like by cutting off that unwanted set of branches from the multiversal tree through sheer will, Booker became a FACT, a constant, without the Comstock variable. I actually believe in a multiverse and am sort of obsessed with trying to be a constant and to value the likely constants in my life across time and space--so I guess you could say for me the game was almost like a religious experience. 

    Burial at Sea kind of bothered me because I felt like it erased the messages of hope and redemption of Infinite somewhat--Elizabeth seems doomed to repeat the mistakes of her lineage, even though they erased that lineage, etc. And ironically, I think that version of Comstock she murdered was actually on a redemption path toward becoming more like Booker. But I really like what you said here--that in a way, doing so was what erased her and created balance--indeed, her existence did seem to be an anomaly, and it kind of makes sense she'd wipe herself out in that fashion. Still, it would have been nice if our heroes hadn't been consumed by all that self-loathing in the end. For all their flaws, they were remarkable people. Comstock was a monster on an incredible scale--so the fact that Booker managed to beat him means that the good in him towered even higher than his demons, and the same was true for Elizabeth in Infinite. I guess I just wished she'd been able to see that in Burial at Sea. Still, her act in saving Sally did a wonderful job tying full circle to the thematic elements of the first two games and the protection of the innocents as what makes a life worth living--and what makes it worth sacrificing if necessary.
  12. Like
    kingpotato got a reaction from StaceyPowers in Bioshock Infinite Blew My Mind   
    ***SPOILERS***
     

    I just finished the game during the weekend. Oh my god this game was awesome, I liked the little details with the Lutteces where they always knew if Booker will get heads or tails 122 times because it was not the first time that they tried to save Elizabeth, or how they knew he will get the ball 77 in the raffle, Constants and Variables. The ending was sad, I feel that Elizabeth's death in Burial at Sea was the universe's way of creating balance, Elizabeth only existed because of father Comstock and since she got rid of the "last" version of him on Rapture there was no reason for her to continue to exist.
  13. Like
    kingpotato reacted to DC in VGR Member of the Month - February 2020   
    Please cast your vote in the poll above for this month's Member of the Month. The winner will receive 500 Points which can be used to Bid for Rewards like giftcards, cash, video games, and gaming consoles.
    Member of the Month is generally awarded to the individual who had the biggest impact on the VGR Forum. This is generally in the form of contributing the most amount of posts in terms of quantity and/or quality, but can extend to referrals/promotion and other efforts to benefit the community.
    Voting closes March 5th at 10pm EST.
  14. Like
    kingpotato reacted to DC in VGR Member of the Month - February 2020   
    @Shagger @killamch89 @kingpotato @Crazycrab @The Blackangel @Executor Akamia @DylanC - get your votes in and invite your friends to join VGR to vote for you!
  15. Like
    kingpotato reacted to StaceyPowers in In BioShock Infinite, why did Comstock have artwork of Elizabeth’s journey?   
    SPOILERS follow:
     
    On a replay of BioShock Infinite, I stumbled on something that confuses me. In the room on the zeppelin right before you go deal with Comstock, there is some artwork on the walls in panels that shows the journey Elizabeth and Booker have taken over the course of the game to reach that moment.
    I am not confused about why Comstock knows about those events—I know he was looking through tears at possible futures. My question is, why does he display beautiful artwork proudly of these events? Considering what’s about to happen to him, it’s utterly bizarre. All I can come up with is:
    1-Maybe he thinks he will survive the encounter.
    2-He’s tired, thinks he’ll win through Elizabeth, and doesn’t care if he survives the encounter.
    Or
    3-He has a secret deathwish and welcomes his demise/failure.
    The last of those would be the most interesting possibility, though he really does seem to have put his all into killing Booker. Then again, a guy with major self-loathing issues and amazing mental compartmentalizing capabilities (consider his racism), I wouldn’t put it past . I mean, he’s literally created his own private hell in Columbia. Being as he wants to punish himself, maybe he also secretly wants to clear the debt. I thought this theory was outlandish until I just finished Burial at Sea Part 1, wherein there was at least one Comstock seeking redemption (and forgetfulness, yes--but via Sally, definitely self-improvement).
    Thoughts?
    @DylanC @skyfire
  16. Like
    kingpotato reacted to DylanC in Were any incarnations of Booker and Elizabeth present in Bioshock 1 or 2?   
    Yeah, Minerva’s Den is supposed to be great so I’m looking forward to it, too. Hmm, I always thought there was an explicit explanation/connection to vigors in Infinite to the seaslugs in Bioshock.
    This may help and is courtesy of the Bioshock Infinite Wiki: 
    “Although Vigors differ from Plasmids in their application (drunk rather than injected directly into the blood stream), they share the same origin. Using the Lutece Device to look at other worlds, Jeremiah Finkeventually witnessed in November of 1894 the work of the geneticist Dr. Yi Suchong in Rapture and his creation procedures for Plasmids.[1] From this point, he assembled a laboratory to research and release them as Fink Manufacturing products. Fink also organized several underwater expeditions all around the Atlantic ocean in order to acquire and study Sea Slugs, whose ADAM is the base for Plasmids and Vigors.[2]
    Research wasn't without risk and led to accidents, such as Devil's Kiss Vigors setting fire to a factory building in October 1900, which was then separated from the city to avoid its spread but condemned all workers trapped inside.[3] The incident was covered up by Fink Manufacturing who assured the population of the tonic's safety once released,[4] although it only resumed production eight years later by Policedemand.[5] These incidents eventually raised public concern as far as in early July 1912, and Fink reassured Columbia's fair inhabitants that it was a necessary evil for their own safety.[6] He also took the opportunity of hosting the 1912 Raffle and Fair the same month to promote and sell his products, including Bucking Bronco trials and free Possession giveaways.[7] Yet, a few people were still cautious about the next Vigors and preferred to wait for Fink to improve their stability.
    Fink's notes on the Vigor variations.
    Even with active marketing to sell Vigors, Fink was losing money due to the cost of the underwater expeditions.[2] In early June 1912, he went to think about changing the structure of his Vigors to their original form and less expensive on ADAM: injectable Plasmids. He also went to copy the design of syringes used in Rapture to cut the cost of making individual bottles for each tonic.[8]”
  17. Like
    kingpotato reacted to StaceyPowers in Were any incarnations of Booker and Elizabeth present in Bioshock 1 or 2?   
    SPOILERS BELOW
     
     
    I still have not played Burial at Sea, but I have now played Bioshock 1, 2 and Infinite.
    So much about Infinite felt (and feels) like a puzzle I am trying to solve. I thought playing 1 and 2 would provide some answers, but I have nothing but more questions and confusion.
    Elizabeth said, “There’s always a man, always a lighthouse, always a city.” Obviously, we’ve got the lighthouse and the city. But who is the man?
    Is Booker Andrew Ryan? Jack? Delta? And what about Elizabeth?
    The clearest parallels seem to be between Elizabeth and Eleanor, and thus potentially between Booker and Delta. We know Delta is a diver that the people of Rapture nicknamed “Johnny Topside,” but his real name was never revealed. Then again, his name wouldn’t necessarily matter. That could be a variable.
    I am aware that a “Booker” exists in Burial at Sea, which just increases my confusion. Not that two versions of a man can’t exist in one universe; obviously that was all over Infinite.
    The other odd thing is all the links in the environment, as well as other parallel figures in the stories.
    Like it’s strange to me that the plasmids exist in both worlds, and the vending machines are nearly identical, and so forth. And there are similar characters like Fink and Fontaine (who could be the same man). But I could easily imagine the same personnel who would join Rapture would also find their way to Columbia.
    Lamb certainly reminds me of Comstock, though it would seem odd to assert that Delta and Lamb are the same person.
    Anyone have any theories about all this, particularly Booker and Elizabeth’s potential Rapture identities?
    @DylanC Tagging you again in hopes you have some thoughts to share.
  18. Like
    kingpotato reacted to StaceyPowers in Bioshock Infinite Questions After Finishing (Spoilers)   
    Please note: SPOILERS below.
    I just wrapped up my first playthrough of Bioshock Infinite. I am pretty sure there are no solid answers to these questions, but if anyone has anything they’d like to chime in, please do.
    Here are some things I’m unclear about:
    1-Why did Booker only lose his memory while crossing between universes at the start of the game? Why not on other crosses?
    2-What is the significance of his nosebleed? I get that he is dead in other realities … but we all are.
    3-What are the implications of the after-credits scene? All I can come up with is that this is a surviving Booker and Anna (or a series of them) who splintered off before the baptism event (in other words, he never went there).
    4-Was he drowned before or after he made the actual “decision” about the baptism? (I don’t think there is really any way to confirm when in time the “decision point” occurred) In other words, did this kill Comstock and Booker, or just Comstock?
  19. Like
    kingpotato reacted to StaceyPowers in Bioshock Infinite Blew My Mind   
    I just wrapped up my initial playthrough of Bioshock Infinite, and have thought about it pretty much nonstop ever since.
    SPOILERS below. Just a few reasons this game blew my mind:
    -A logical, well-reasoned story about the multiverse (I feel most people get the concept wrong)
    -A different take on the nature and value of choice than you usually see in arguments about choice v. determinism.
    -An unbelievably atmospheric setting. Columbia feels “real” to me still, like it’s hidden somewhere, just on the other side of a portal to another world.
    -Amazing character development and some of the most brilliant “show-don’t-tell” writing I’ve ever seen. By the end of the game, you know that in a pretty literal way, Booker has been battling his own demons in his own personal hell through the entire game. The setting tells the story of the man.
    -Seriously inspirational. The ending ripped my heart out, but at the same time, I loved it as an achievement of ultimate redemption. 
     
    If you’ve played the game, please share your thoughts!
  20. Like
    kingpotato reacted to Executor Akamia in Last Game Played   
    Final Fantasy XIV
    I've been sinking countless hours into this one, trying to level my character's classes as far as I can to unlock their stuff as I go through the main scenario questline. I need a break. 😰 I haven't spent this much time in two weeks on one game since Stellaris... Speaking of which, the Federations expansion is coming out in less than 3 weeks. I'm looking forward to it.
  21. Like
    kingpotato reacted to skyfire in Last Game Played   
    Limbo
  22. Like
    kingpotato reacted to DC in Last Game Played   
    Apex Legends on XB1
  23. Like
    kingpotato reacted to King45Gamer in Last Game Played   
    I stared playing Saint Row the 3rd got it a few days ago.
  24. Like
    kingpotato reacted to SaucyPastaTho in Last Game Played   
    Metro Redux, I'm actually enjoying the game so far even though I just started.
  25. Like
    kingpotato reacted to StaceyPowers in Did anything in Rapture (in Bioshock) deserve to be saved?   
    Excellent analysis, and you’ve expressed your thoughts really clearly. I completely agree with you that the entire philosophy behind Rapture was flawed from the off. The irony to me is that Fontaine did exactly what Andrew Ryan encouraged everyone in Rapture to do with its runaway cut-throat capitalist ideology. And Rapture ended the way that it would inevitably end. Ryan was surprisingly naïve in his belief that the system he put in place was sustainable.
    I hear a lot of people say this, though I liked it. It didn’t have any “twists” in it and lacked the cleverness of both BioShock 1 and Infinite, but I thought it still told a solid story, albeit one which was more interesting personally than politically. Although I did like that it took on collectivism and its dangers when taken to extremes. What do you feel would have made for some improvements in the plot?
    One thing that did irritate me was that I really wished Eleanor had killed her mother in my playthrough, but alas, the only way I can make this happen is apparently to make decisions earlier in the game that feel lousy to me.
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