23.9 C
New York

What are we all playing this weekend?

Published:

Another week has fallen into the Maw. Theoretically, that means we’re now one week closer to the release of Silksong. As if such words mean anything to any of us anymore.

Here’s what we’re all playing this weekend instead!

Edwin
Edwin Evans-Thirlwell is an anagram of “Well Shrill Devil Newt”. You’re welcome.

James
A spot of cheeky pre-Gamescom Team Fortress 2, I think. My classic comfort game before I’m lowered into the hype blender (or, as they call it over there, der hypen blenderen).

Jeremy
With Wuchang done and dusted, I am going back to my relaxing Final Fantasy XII and Gotham Knights playthroughs. In the non-electronic gaming world, this Saturday I’m also finally picking up my wife and brother-in-laws’ Pathfinder campaign, which has been on hiatus for the past five months due to scheduling woes! *rolls up sleeves* Time for me to familiarise myself with what the heck happened back in March and then make up some Game Master nonsense on the fly.

Mark
I’m now on the verge of heading into Dogtown in my chromed-up engineer Cyberpunk playthrough. Who knows what’ll happen. I mean, I do because this is my fourth go, but hey, some details will definitely have slipped through my sieve-like brain in the intervening years. So, if on Monday you’re wondering why the dogs have been let out, you’re looking at the perpetrator. Also, I might blast around with Mafia: The Old Country’s first person driving mod a bit more. There’ve got to be some big jumps lying around amid all the olive farms and old blokes called Ettore.

Nic
My educated guess is that Nic’s likely busy directing an intimidating horde of Rhinos, Arclights, and Steel Balls towards an equal and opposite force of Rhinos, Arclights, and Steel Balls.

Ollie
We’ve now made a rather spectacular mall in our Satisfactory game, if I do say so myself. Aesthetically, it’s our best build yet, despite technically being less a factory and more a dropping-off point for our multiple flourishing train networks. Each train’s mess of crap is carefully sifted through a system of splitters which filter it down into the right conveyor belts, creating order from chaos through the sheer brute force of simple iterative logic. I’m having a good time.


And you, reader dear, what are you playing this weekend?…

Source link

Related articles

Recent articles