Saturday, 27 September 2025

Games

Doom
Doom is the 11th greatest PC game of all time and 2nd greatest retro game of all time. I'm sure I played it Back In The Day, but never thoroughly. Nowadays, you can get it dirt cheap along with its sequel, plus a bunch of mods and stuff, with some updated graphics and whatnot (not a total overhaul, but it's in widescreen, for example), so I thought I should give it a go... on the lowest difficulty, natch. And on my Steam Deck, which normally isn't ideal for FPS games (controllers are so hard to aim with), but as you don't have to look up and down in Doom, it's considerably easier. Also, like I said, lowest difficulty.

I would say I breezed through it, and I did in the sense that I didn't die until the boss fight at the end (it took me a couple of goes to realise I could run anywhere — clearly "red floor = lava = death" wasn't a game design concept back in 1993), but my times were atrocious: it took me 79 minutes to play the first episode, Knee-Deep in the Dead, while the combined par times (given at the end of each level) total under 18 minutes! I presume they're a target to aim for rather than a "what you manage on your first go, while blundering around getting very lost on some maps and having to backtrack a lot", which is certainly what happened to me. Oh well, I mostly had fun shooting stuff and not dying (lowest difficulty, remember). Said episode contained nine levels, while the combined DOOM + DOOM II I referred to reports to have 187 missions all-in. That's the potential for plenty of value from the less-than-£3 it cost me.


Forza Horizon 4
On the other hand, I can't really remember what piqued my initial interest in this. A chain of events got me to download it today, though: somewhere I stumbled across the news that Forza Horizon 6 will be set in Japan, which made me curious where previous games were set, and (long story short) I discovered 4 was set in the UK but is no longer available to buy (it was discontinued at the end of last year due to licences expiring). The UK setting and my background interest was enough that I probably would've bought it, but as I couldn't I learnt something new about my Steam Deck: how to get games on there from, uh, questionable sources. It's amazing how much that world has come on in recent years, but I won't extrapolate too much.

Anyway, I'm glad I did because it's actually a tonne of fun! Being an open world game, you can just drive around roads — which might sound dull because, y'know, I could go outside and do that for real; but not at these speeds, in these cars, on a condensed map that packs in various different parts of the UK. It's fun! And then there are races and story mode bits and stuff to progress. Me being me, I turned the difficulty right down, to the point where actually it was just silly so I turned it back up a bit. Fun times. It looks great on the Deck too, running in full HD to my TV and only experiencing issues on loading animations (which, as you're not playing at that point, I can totally live with).

I can see myself sinking hours into this, possibly.

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