Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.05.2006, Síða 23

Reykjavík Grapevine - 19.05.2006, Síða 23
As I approached a recent interview, and real- ized that after a lengthy cross-Atlantic f light I would be expected to hold a coherent con- versation, I decited I needed a new method for coping with my fear of f lying—anxiety medication is pricey and makes one dopey, alcohol tends to have an effect on the think- ing process as well. The solution: the PSP, a personal gaming unit by Sony. The arguments against buying a game system when you’re over the age of 20 are many: they are anti-social, they are dumb, and women, men, professionals, and even most children will look down as you as a short attention-span goof for tapping away at a little gismo. However, through experience, I can ar- gue that a PSP can definitely help with social situations in the same way braces might help teenagers. True, while you’re playing a PSP you’re in a wasteland, but the little machine offers a wholly absorbing distraction that allows you to get through things like delayed f lights and turbulence without reacting—it’s the closest thing you can get to a temporary lobotomy. My test with a PSP was fascinating even before I put the disk into the machine. For starters, a PSP has a web browser and excel- lent wireless modem. In a café, I was able to check email, get songs off of Myspace, and read the Reykjavík Grapevine online. The games themselves seemed, at first, limiting. A PSP is meant to be played in a somewhat social setting—I did not want to be the guy playing a sniper game, or, for that matter, Grand Theft Auto, on an airplane. Still, I couldn’t resist picking up the adven- ture title X-Men Legends 2. X-Men is a platform game, meaning it is something like Super Mario Brothers, in which you guide your heroes throughout maze-type activities, breaking random crap and fighting bad guys. Designed by Activi- sion, the game includes digital comic books, and various side games and distractions— enough for someone bored with the idea of actually gaming to keep focused and happy. Having invested the bulk of two layovers into X-Men, I have come nowhere near winning the game or unlocking many characters, and I have no interest in continuing to battle, even if I enjoy freezing things as the uber-fey superhero Iceman. But the game has dis- tracted well. The main draw on the PSP, though, is the selection and quality of the movie titles. The handheld device functions extremely well as a digital movie player. Sadly, in our test run, I purchased Once Upon a Time in Mexico and Fun with Dick and Jane. The first ten minutes of each demonstrated PSP’s incredible resolution, excellent sound, and intuitive design. Concentrating as one does on the remarkable screen and sound from the PSP, the over-the-top explosions of Once Upon a Time seemed that much bigger— and, after ten minutes of boring dialogue, that much more tedious. The same went for Jim Carrey’s pyrotechnic acting style. After one month with the PSP, I am positive the device has a future for travellers, professionals and people with short attention spans. At present, though, I have yet to see game and movie titles for the over 20, not in need of Visine and brownies, crowd. BC The Elder Scrolls is a popular series of RPGs (role playing games) set in its own fantasy world, albeit one heavily based on a variety of other RPG universes that all seem to owe a great deal to the Tolkien mythos. The vast game world is populated with a variety of elves, mages, warriors, animated skeletons, golems, vampires and the like – all playing major or minor roles in the open-ended story the player is participating in. In the latest instalment, Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, the sheer scale and detail of the surrounding environment has been taken to new levels. The first thing that strikes you about Oblivion is the fact that your computer sucks. If you’re not packing some serious NASA- style hardware, you’re going to be scaling down the graphics options quite a bit from the highest settings. That being said, the Grapevine reviewed the game on an AMD Athlon 64 with half a gigabyte of memory and managed to get a decent performance out of it, but to keep it looking really pretty we had accept a fairly low frame rate during some of the larger battles. Speaking of battles, you’re going to have to put any pacifistic tendencies aside and do some fighting if you want to survive in the world of Elder Scrolls. Granted, the open ended nature of the game means that you often have other options: such as using the powers of persuasion, bribery or stealth. It’s just that when you are charged by an army of unholy apparitions wielding magical bolts of fire and whatnot; negotiations are effectively over and you’re going to need to whip out a weapon of some sort. The weapons at your disposal are hugely varied, but they mostly fall into two main categories: magical and non-magical. Magical weapons include spells, enchanted daggers and such, while the more traditional medieval tools of destruc- tion are all there as well. OK, so people in the Middle Ages may not have actually fash- ioned weapons and armour from the bones of trolls, but the design-theme is there. All in all, Elder Scrolls IV is a fantastic RPG, but not a game that is going to win many new devotees to the genre. It’s a hard- core RPG outing and will no doubt please the Elder Scrolls fan base no end, packing in more quests, spells, options and refinements than you could shake a very large ‘Level 4 Enchanted Stick of Shaking’ at. Just don’t expect to be pampered or led by the hand through the experience: this is serious nerd territory. It may not be the newest release on the market, but Battlefield 2 is one seriously hot game and as more expansion packs are in the pipeline it’s set to continue to be one of the most popular online games out there. Essentially a follow up to the tremendously successful Battlefield: 1942 and Battlefield: Vietnam, Battlefield 2 is a modern combat simulation designed for co-operative online play. You pick a side, a map and a weapons class, and then you head out into an un- predictable and unscripted war zone full of equally ambitious and bloodthirsty armchair soldiers as yourself. Your mission, and you have no choice but to accept it: capture several strategic points on the map, each indicated by a f lag and surrounded by angry enemy soldiers who want your f lagpoints just as much. What weapons class you choose can have a big impact on the way you play the game. In the original, unmodified game, there are seven: anti-tank, assault, engineer, medic, sniper, special ops and support. If you have a bazooka you are invaluable to your team when that APC or tank comes rumbling over the horizon, but your weedy little machine- gun makes you a liability in a fire fight. Assault infantry are well armed but poorly armoured, the engineer and medics fix vehicles and people respectively, the sniper obviously snipes, special ops deliver power- ful packs of C4 explosives and the support role basically means you carry around a lot of ammo and a ridiculously overpowered machinegun that hits nothing but scares the bejeezus out of everyone nearby. In addition, you can apply to be ‘Commander’ of your squad, which gives you option of using things like unmanned aerial vehicles, satellite scans and heavy artillery strikes for the benefit of the grunts on the front lines. Once you get to grips with the various classes and weapons available to you, your next step is probably going to be to play around with the military hardware that is liberally scattered throughout the playing areas. Anyone can jump into anything, be it an enemy helicopter or a friendly jeep, and attempt to raise some vehicular hell. Be warned, though, handling some of the more impressive machinery (particularly the air- craft) is trickier than waxing an angry tiger in heat – so chances are your early forays into military aviation will simply make you deeply unpopular amongst your team mates. Don’t worry, though, someone always has to be “that guy” who drops the 500 pound bomb on his team’s victory f lag – just call it a tribute to the American Airforce. In conclusion: if you used to play with toy soldiers and/or simply love the smell of napalm in the morning, Battlefield 2 is the online gaming experience for all your adrenaline junky needs. This isn’t Doom, so forget about running around dungeons at 50 miles per hour, shooting up supernatural entities and aliens with ray guns. Battlefield depicts modern combat, pure and unadulter- ated military pornography in every respect. And just like regular pornography, you don’t have to be pro-war to suspend your disbelief and revel in the fantasy of being there and doing that. Repeatedly. GHJ By Bart Cameron and Gunnar Hrafn Jónsson Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion PSP for Business Battlefield 2 Hafnarstræti Bankastræti Laugav. Hverfisgata Læ kja rg at a In gó lfs st ræ ti A great selection of souvenirs... ...stock up on souvernirs from Iceland. 2 stores in the Center of Reykjavík 1 store in the Center of Akureyri You can find our stores at Reykjavik Center, Akureyri and Keflavik Airport. icelandgiftstore.com Ewe won´t regret it... Skipagata Skipagata Hofsbót Ráðhústorg Hafnarstræ ti 44

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