I'm going to follow the example set by /r/52book and say that the first week has ended.
My game for the past week was
A Game of Dwarves. I did not finish it (sadly), but I did beat maybe a third of it. This is a challenge of my own making, so there are kinks to work out. The first kink is that I'm not going to try to beat every game. I'll try to get as far as possible, but my free time is limited and I would rather not spend every waking moment gaming.
GoD is currently $10 on Steam undiscounted. At that price point it's probably worth it. It's a Paradox strategy game, but it's in a completely separate class than the grand strategy games that they're known for.
Levels have been pretty tedious so far, with each requiring more preparation than the last. It's not a game that you sit down and play from beginning to end. Your dwarves start at level 1 on each stage, but every unknown cave you dig into has the possibility of containing harder and harder enemies as you progress. The king's orders do give something to work towards while you're waiting, however. It's nothing too impressive - mine X blocks, reach tech Y in the tech tree (more waiting, yay), discover Z macguffins from unexplored caves. Part of the tedium also lies in the underground caves I mentioned. Each level so far seems to be about digging into caves, fighting the contents to level up, and then determining the right cave to dig into, which may or may not contain a boss monster. Given that the tech tree and buildings are fully available in every stage, there's nothing new to see. There are new enemies now and then, but they have thus far been clones of one another. Moles, gnomes, goblins, and orcs all just stand there and trade blows with you until something expires. Not exactly engaging gameplay.
That being said, this can be pretty entertaining if you play stages sparingly. I'll
definitelyprobablymaybe finish this in the future.
This is the only time I'll use achievements as a metric. My last achievement for this playthrough is "Striking The First Blow", which only 23.1% of players have picked up thus far.
And now I'm off to do some things and determine what to play next. I'm open to suggestions as long as they're on my list or are significantly discounted (I'm trying to reduce my backlog, remember) and they follow the criteria in my first few posts.
If no one has suggested anything in the coming hours, I'll pick the next game.Next up:
Dust: An Elysian Tale