Spider-bashing in Legend of Grimrock
Jun. 10th, 2012 05:22 pmIn the middle of my recovery period, I talked about playing through Legend of Grimrock - a dungeon crawler that shockingly I rather enjoyed, with the only real fault I could pick out being that it was a dungeon crawler.
Near the start of my exploration through it, a couple of people asked me to put it on Livestream so that they could watch it being played - I had forgotten I had the recording because it consisted of over an hour of wandering around lost, but as it had been a while since I posted a game video, I compressed the good bits down into just over ten minutes of conversational muttering punctuated with the occasional scream as one of the game's many giant spiders sneaks up behind me.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uI2Znx1gEE
There are no spoilers in this video apart from showing you a couple of self-made spreadsheet maps - but if you want to play Legend of Grimrock, this is pretty much what you can expect from it.
Near the start of my exploration through it, a couple of people asked me to put it on Livestream so that they could watch it being played - I had forgotten I had the recording because it consisted of over an hour of wandering around lost, but as it had been a while since I posted a game video, I compressed the good bits down into just over ten minutes of conversational muttering punctuated with the occasional scream as one of the game's many giant spiders sneaks up behind me.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_uI2Znx1gEE
There are no spoilers in this video apart from showing you a couple of self-made spreadsheet maps - but if you want to play Legend of Grimrock, this is pretty much what you can expect from it.
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Date: 2012-06-13 02:29 am (UTC)Drawing my own map was great fun for the first two floors, after which I got utterly fed up with it - it did seem to be just unnecessary work after the computer had offered to do it for me. There's a certain feeling of pride in successfully navigating and mapping something, but it can feel like a lot of work that takes away from just exploring the game - Etrian Odyssey had the right level here, where it would fill in explored tiles for you and you only had to concern yourself with recording the walls (and in a way that didn't take you out of the game at all).
Your alphabet experience sounds like my own, when exploring Commander Keen :) It was sort of incredible to realize that the signs I had been seeing throughout the game actually had meaning to them, when translations of individual letters started appearing... and being able to gradually fill in the blanks and read them really was special. Eventually, there was a level with the entire alphabet somewhere in a secret area near the top, and after working through it based on occasional clues until then, it really did feel like discovering the Rosetta Stone.
Here is a confused knitting spider! And two plasticine cats, one of which is named after a Chinese dictator. Also a sound man who's swallowed a canister of helium and and an entire bag of cane sugar.
no subject
Date: 2012-06-13 03:10 am (UTC)Y'know what, the design of those cats is absolutely adorable, for something that seems like it almost could have been nightmarish...!
Did you just find this, or remember it..?
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Date: 2012-06-13 11:39 am (UTC)I do remember knowing that Mao was the name of someone from China who was a bit dodgy, even then - thanks to Civilization!