I've been hitting the armor if it's more than my attacker's, then going for their health after that. I'm not sure that's exactly right, but it worked ok today when I played for an hour while I waited for Diablo to install.
I've been hitting the armor if it's more than my attacker's, then going for their health after that. I'm not sure that's exactly right, but it worked ok today when I played for an hour while I waited for Diablo to install.
I'd love to spend some time out west. Went there once as a kid, but I'd like to revisit.
Kacey Musgraves is pretty easy on the eyes, I'll say that.
Someone on one of my podcasts was joking about not knowing what a CD was. I thought it was funny because, really, they seem pretty out of date with dowloads and streaming and all. Even thinking about music as files seems a little old fashioned. What's a file? I just turn on a streaming service and hear the music. It' is the cloud, man. Dig it?
Just kidding, though. I just bought some CDs and vinyl this week. Of course, I just ripped them to my laptop to play on my iPod. Then they get put in a folder or recycled.
Right, sometimes they're fun. Maybe I just need a break from them.
I usually stop on an achievement if it seems like it will be a long tedious process. I don't want it to become like work. Oh, heck no.
"achievement fever" is a good phrase. I think I had that with Doom last week.
After playing the story in a game, I usually find I'm at about 50% completion with achievements. That's without looking at them once or really thinking about them; although, now that I know many of the types of things achievements usually ask for, I sometimes think about doing certain things during my first playthrough. I don't want to distract myself too much from the story, though, on my first run.
I felt today like I ruined further playthroughs of Doom by using a walkthrough to finish up the collectibles. I figured it would take me too long to get them all on my own, but now I kind of want another reason to play the campaign again. I'm considering playing on a new save and just upgrading whatever I want instead of trying to be all completionist about it. I sort of feel achievements might be getting in the way of my enjoyment of a game at the moment.
That's a good attitude. It's easy to get caught up in various challenges a game gives you. I'm kind of interested in seeing what achievements I don't get now, or what ones I get just by playing my own way. It was interesting seeing where all the secrets were that I missed in Doom. I used a walkthrough and some of them I would've gotten on another playthrough, but some of them were so obscure, I would've had to discover them by accident to find them on my own.
I did Christmas music for like two days. That's about enough for me.
That cassette tape to mp3 is pretty cool. I converted all my tapes to cd some years ago. I used to occassionally pick up a used cassette tape of music and convert it, but I haven't seen any in a while now. I've also gotten rid of all my tape players. Sometimes I think it might be good to have one around just in case, but I really haven't seen a cassette tape in a long while. Even my used record store, which I just went to the other day, doesn't have them anymore.
Sometimes they are good, like the One Bullet achievement in Half Life 2 that forced me to use the gravity gun for the whole game, but a lot of the time they are just pointless attempts to keep you in the game as long as possible. I almost regret getting every collectible in Doom now. I should've avoided the walkthrough videos.