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Games of 2011: Jamestown

I’ve spent a lot of time in 2011 playing games, but not a lot of time writing about them. Instead of my usual end-of-year game recommendations, I’d like to tell some stories or share some thoughts about the ones that meant the most to me this year. I’ll be posting one a day until Christmas. See all Games of 2011 posts.

Think of the music industry for a moment, and consider the transformation from 1995 to 2010. Distribution transformed from mostly retail to mostly digital. Indie labels became stronger and able to compete better in the new landscape than the big labels. Bands started self-publishing and crowd-sourcing funding. Audio software became prevalent, meaning anyone could produce an album where they separate their laundry. Media outlets like Pitchfork and The Silent Ballet appeared that we’re entirely devoted to independent music. Music festivals like ATP and SXSW blew up with people hunting for new sounds. Genres were invented, mutated, and redefined. And all the while, the old guard screamed bloody murder.

That 15 year trajectory have put us in a world where the music world of today only slightly resembles the one of old. The gaming world is in the middle of this same path, and 2011 has really felt like the tipping point, where the independent game world steps out of the shadows.

There are so many success stories this year – Minecraft, Super Meat Boy, Limbo, the Humble Indie Bundles – that this post series could’ve been entirely indie titles. But the one I wanted to highlight in the context of this shift is Jamestown.

Just consider the concept: it’s a vertical scrolling bullet hell shmup set on 17th-century British Colonial Mars. Just roll that around your tongue for a moment. What major publisher would fund this, let alone market it properly? I can’t think of a single one.

Instead, this game was self published, priced reasonably, and got prominently featured on Steam. People who bought it tended to love it, and told friends. Gaming media reviewed it seriously, as though it were a boxed title in a store. I can’t speak to the sales figures, but the remarkable thing was that it exists no differently than any other major game released this year.

And the thing is, none of this was unusual – at least, not this year. The giant changes that made this story possibly – the ascension of Steam, gaming communities that can generate hype, a pricing model other than “everything is expensive” – these are all second nature now for a lot of gamers and developers.

There’s still more work to be done, undoubtedly. While Steam and Apple are at the forefront of this movement, the major console makers are still fumbling around, much as the major music labels did with online music sales. Microsoft, who had repeated critical hits pass through XBLA early this generation, is now focused on the big publishers. Nintendo has publicly disparaged “garage developers”. Sony continues to find and work with small studios, but the PSN hack this year damaged the trust in their store immeasurably. Until the big three get their act together, a huge swath of gamers will be out of reach for independents.

I’m looking forward to a world where games like Jamestown are just as familiar to the average gamer as Gears of War. And I don’t think it’s far off.

As for Jamestown itself – it’s everything I want in a shmup. It can scale down to easy for people new to the genre, or up to ridiculous pixel-perfect bullet dodging for the hardcore. Going along with it’s “neoclassical” setting, it has a certain retro charm to the graphics – a game that wouldn’t look out of place in an arcade of the mid-90s. Like many modern shmups, there’s a unique mechanic to exploit and learn to maximize your score (in this case, the “vaunt” system). There’s unlocks and special challenges to keep people coming back. It walks the line between nostalgia and new incredibly well. It’s a great game in it’s own right, without question.

Jamestown is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux. It is also available as part of the Humble Indie Bundle 4, which you should buy now because every game in it is wonderful.

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Enjoyed

Games of 2011: Quarrel Deluxe

I’ve spent a lot of time in 2011 playing games, but not a lot of time writing about them. Instead of my usual end-of-year game recommendations, I’d like to tell some stories or share some thoughts about the ones that meant the most to me this year. I’ll be posting one a day until Christmas. See all Games of 2011 posts.

For reasons that may become clear in a later post, I’m short on time for today’s post; as such, it’s perfect for a little game like Quarrel Deluxe.

Quarrel is 50% Risk – you have a map, and cartoon soldiers, and your goal is to take over all the territories. But it’s also 50% Countdown, that much beloved British institution, as the way you win battles is by spelling more complex words than your opponents.

That game combination is practically a mix of chocolate and peanut butter in and of itself. The well-drawn art, the AI personalities, the career mode and daily challenges, and the nice layer of polish on the game just make it even tastier.

The one negative I hear people throw around with Quarrel is that it doesn’t have multiplayer. I reject this criticism; if there’s anything online gaming has shown us, it’s that word games with multiplayer tend to be fraught with cheating and fraud. Dictionary tools and anagram finders mean that playing against unfamiliar opponents is often an exercise in “Great Vocabulary Or Cheater?”. Given the real-time nature of Quarrel (ties are broken by the fastest submission), I actually prefer the game without running into the game-breaking dangers of having an online component.

So here’s to a great single player board game. Quarrel’s sound design, style, and mechanics mean I don’t really miss online play.

Quarrel Deluxe is available as a Universal iOS app. There’s a non-Deluxe version available for free, although I can’t tell you what the limitations are.

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Games of 2011: You Don’t Know Jack

I’ve spent a lot of time in 2011 playing games, but not a lot of time writing about them. Instead of my usual end-of-year game recommendations, I’d like to tell some stories or share some thoughts about the ones that meant the most to me this year. I’ll be posting one a day until Christmas. See all Games of 2011 posts.

2011 felt like the year that a number of old franchises were dusted off, given a warm bath to get the color back in their cheeks, and re-presented to the world.[1. It may be worth noting that Duke Nukem Forever is not on my list of games.]

Of the three that made my list, I was most excited about the return of You Don’t Know Jack. The original series was one of the few games that delivered on the promise that CD-ROMs offered. It was whip smart and absurdly funny.

The world has changed in the sixteen years since the series premiered, and that manifested itself into a more console-friendly experience. The randomly selected pool of questions is out, and a series of episodes each with eleven questions are in. With a nod to other quiz games trying to keep all players engaged, there’s no longer buzzing in – everyone can play every question. Some question types are gone (the much beloved Gibberish Question being the most notable), and some new ones are in (including the amazingly named Cookie’s Fortune Cookie Fortunes (with Cookie “Fortune Cookie” Masterson)). And so on.

These changes are fairly hit and miss – the biggest shortcoming being that an eleven question game feels pretty damn short. Luckily, you won’t always notice, as the strength of the writing is just as good as it was during the original series peak[2. Which, in my opinion, was Vol. 4 The Ride.]. Tom Gottlieb returns as host Cookie Masterson, and the tone of the game just feels so perfectly right. Few games can manage to have such a clear house style as YDKJ has managed to over the years.

In a perfect world, someone would combine the writing and style of YDKJ with the robustness and functionality of Sony’s Buzz series. And given THQ’s rumored monetary problems, the odds of us seeing another title in the series are probably pretty low. Even if this is one last gasp at YDKJ returning to the world, it brought me a lot of joy, as it will to anyone who enjoys trivia, puzzles, and lisping ventriloquism dummies.