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Archives for 2012

Beautiful Skyrim

November 20, 2012 by Tony Leave a Comment

James pointed me to a post over at the PC Gamer Blog showing off some STUNNING enhancements that are possible with Skyrim.

It’s no surprise that the modding community was going to tear into Skyrim and tweak every nook and cranny and really improve upon it. Bethesda and Steam facilitated that, to their credit. But I’m actually beyond amazed what has already taken place.

What has me more interested is what the PC Gamer writer says: “Keep in mind that when that grass fills the screen Unreal reports framerates as low as 5 fps, so super-modded Skyrim isn’t always playable. But think of it as a preview of the near-future.” This is what really excites me. The near future. I’m still torn between becoming a full-time PC gamer and a console gamer. But the thought of what the next Xbox or Playstation is going to be capable of makes the graphics whore in me giddy beyond belief.

Seriously, just look at these beautiful images. Now to pick one for the new PC background.

Filed Under: Gaming Tagged With: PC, The Elder Scrolls: Skyrim

Planning a PC Build Before the End of the World

November 12, 2012 by Nick 6 Comments

For over a decade now I have had an itching desire to construct myself a gaming PC – burning, even, probably from all that itching. Indeed, a computer that would facilitate ultra graphic settings; where I don’t even have to consider a game’s system requirements or even recommendation because the rig would be so slammin’. I’ve had my fair share of personal computers, be they gifted or shared or hand-me-downed, and am forever grateful for my time with them. And they weren’t utilized just for gaming. I taught myself the basics of HTML4, maintained a couple of websites, and dabbled in Photoshop, Visual Basic. A Compaq Presario was, amongst other things, my tap into the wonders of mIRC where I discovered a whole musical genre that I will take to my grave. This here HP Pavilion laptop, now 5 years old and running strong, has facilitated just about every computational task our family has ever needed… except running Black & White 2 or Medieval II: Total War or DreamFall. So, for as useful and pragmatic as these confangled doohickeys are for pretty much every facet of life, my main desire has always been to use them to game, though I haven’t always been able to be indiscriminate to system requirements.

But for whatever reasons I’ve never actually given myself the opportunity to build one. So, leave it to recent case of envy for my little brother’s ad hoc rig to help motivate me to get this project in gear. Plus, the world is ending in a month so why not go out with a bang? I’ve spent the last couple of months reading up and shopping around, and if more than anything else this has been a fun research project. The power and price of personal computing these days is enticing. What follows, then, is a glance at my thought processes towards what I want, what I can get and finding the happy space in between. Nothing has yet been purchased; this is all theoretical.

As a quick illustration to what I want my new computer to be, please watch the following clip:


Bam. Right there. Indy’s reaction. Love it.

I continue to read about these maxed out $5000 gaming systems – donning black and red color schemes, looking menacing, swinging weapons garishly to and fro -  and, although I do not doubt their superior computing power, I know there’s a more practical and economical way of freaking playing StarCraft 2. For this reason, my new system will assume the moniker ‘Indy’s Bullet’. Indy’s Bullet will be tight, precise and will get the job done. It will be forward-compatible. And it will be built from the following parts: (*NOTE: I’m still learning, please correct and/or suggest where necessary)

CPU – Intel i5 3750K

Motherboard – ASUS P8Z77-V PRO (no Thunderbolt)

I am listing these two main components together because I will be purchasing them at MicroCenter, thusly introducing a major variable to the construction of Indy’s Bullet. MicroCenter is within reasonable distance of me. Purchasing as much as I can from this at-a-loss retailer would only be wise. MC has a combo deal where they will automatically knock off $50 from the price of a motherboard with the purchase of a CPU. Plus, such a close proximity would be extremely advantageous should any part be defective and a plan of action for returns need to go into effect, which I am accepting as a very real possibility.

As per the Intel vs. AMD debate: I’m going with Intel because of reasons… And that’ll be the end of that. Plus, MicroCenter sells these babies at close to $40-$50 less than online stores. Win/Win so far. I’m choosing this model because 1) Ivy Bridge supports PCI-e 3.0, which is necessary for GPU(s), 2) i7 will just be overkill and 3) it is unlocked, and I find this appealing because I want to tinker with overclocking. And overclocking wouldn’t be possible if my motherboard is shoddy.

Yes. I have spent more time researching motherboards than I have any other component. After a great deal of pondering I’ve decided on the P8Z77- PRO because, compared to competing mid-level mobos, this board is more about focused performance than bells & whistles. Indeed, I do not need freaking six USB 3.0 ports. Although, it does come with a Wi-Fi antennae – Asus touting that Indy’s Bullet could also serve as a wireless router ( for what it’s worth this is appealing as our current wireless router is crap). But, back to performance: can overclock memory to 2800; two SATA 6gb/s; two PCI-e 3.0. It has a back-up BIOS, which is good in case I royally screw something up while overclocking. The P8Z77-PRO also has independent fan control, appealing to gamer and tree-hugger alike. And it has this new VirtuMVP technology which, if I understand correctly, will also help with power consumption and contribute to longevity of the GPU.

GPU – Gigabyte GV-N670C-2GD NVIDIA GeForce GTX 670 2048MB GDDR5 PCIe 3.0 x16

Translation: Bottom of the top tier of video cards, or top of the middle tier video cards. I am intentionally rounding down on all other computer components to finance this powerful tool. I am choosing NVIDIA because, more than anything, I’ve just been hearing too many scary stories about Radeon cards, especially when it comes to tweaking. There’s also a 4GB model for about $50 more, but I don’t know enough yet  about the ins/outs of GPUs to determine whether or not this would be worth the extra money. The 2GB model is reported to be nearly-silent, stable and efficient. Me Gusta.

Memory – G.SKILL Sniper Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1866

I must confess that the memory component is one that I’m still fairly ignorant to. But, nonetheless I am confident with my decision with the G. Skill Sniper Series. It’s got a good speed with a reasonable latency. It does not have flashy heat spreaders like Corsair sticks, which could very well get in the way of an after market CPU cooler. Plus, the Sniper Series is compatible with the P8Z77 – minor detail. And 8GB is plenty – PLENTY – for a gaming/enthusiast build; any more and you’re just playing with yourself.

Storage – Intel 330 Series 2.5″ 180GB SATA6Gb/s Solid State Drive(SSD)

Intel has been bringing the hammer down on other SSD manufacturers by creating capable drives at competitive prices. Despite their smaller capacity, SSDs are appealing to me because I simply do not need an abundance of HD space: I uninstall games as soon as I complete or grow bored with them; I do not plan on storing dozens of HD movies. The only media I foresee taking up any moderate amount of space will be audio files – And even then it won’t be that much because 90% of my music are stored on these circular plastic compact discs, or ‘CDs’ for short, that I keep in binders out of the reach of my kids; an even smaller more exclusive group are on larger discs made of wax, which, in the biz, we call ‘vinyls’. Snarkyness aside, a SSD would be right at home in Indy’s Bullet, and with prices dropping by the week there’s no reason in the world to go with a mechanical drive.

Monitor – *undecided brand* 24” Widescreen 1920 x 1080

I had originally thought about aiming towards a true color 1200 resolution but quickly came to my senses. For five years I’ve been using a laptop with a resolution that doesn’t even reach beyond 1280 x 800 (gaming with even less). Therefore a new 24” standard HD monitor will have plenty of WOW! factor. And I think 24” is the sweet spot because 27” is just a migraine waiting to happen.

Power Supply –

Still researching these. Probably Corsair. 700, maybe 750 Watt. That GPU wants at least 550 – the hog.

Case –

No more than $100. USB 3.0 headers. Front headphone jack. Nothing too gaudy or flashy so as to not be a temptation for my kids and their curious button-pressing fingers. It can’t be more than 22” tall in order to fit under my desk; I refuse to put my desktop on my desktop. I like what NZXT does.

This isn’t ugly.

 OS –

Windows 7. Eff Windows 8.

When all is said and done I feel that this is a very reasonable, well-planned build. Indy’s Bullet will play the RTS games that I long for, as well as facilitate any programming or audio editing/mixing that may come my way. All hail the PC.

Filed Under: Features

The Warrior has fallen… on the button [Borderlands 2]

November 10, 2012 by Tony 4 Comments

This post has mild spoilers for the ending of Borderlands 2. Hit the jump to see the full post. (Sorry feed readers, you’re going to see the whole thing)

[Read more…] about The Warrior has fallen… on the button [Borderlands 2]

Filed Under: Gaming Tagged With: Borderlands 2

Weekend Gaming

November 9, 2012 by Tony 2 Comments

Another weekend is upon us! This one snuck up on me all of a sudden. This weekend is a bye week for both of my football teams, so I’m looking at quite a bit of gaming time.

Borderlands 2 continues to consume the bulk of my gaming time, but I think (at least Mordecai told me) that we are gearing up for the final mission. That means that we either barrel through and finish up the game (until more DLC drops) or we become completionists and start mopping up all the side-quests (even the level 5 stuff we forgot to do weeks ago). With Halo 4 already out, I have a feeling we’ll be finishing up Borderlands 2 sooner rather than later.

When the main TV isn’t available for 360’ing, I plan on doing a little PC gaming. Maybe hop back into Diablo 3 for a look around or maybe something unplayed in Steam.

What gaming are you doing this weekend?

Filed Under: Weekend Gaming

November Releases

November 5, 2012 by Tony 4 Comments

Man, November and its releases really snuck up on me this month. Never mind that it’s by far the busiest month of releases, that the Wii U is launching and that this is one of the stronger line-ups in a while. It was just “BAM!” and I realized it was already November 5th. So let’s get to the releases:

Week of November 6th
Dragon Ball Z Budokai HD Collection
Saints Row The Third The Full Package
NASCAR The Game: Inside Line
Mass Effect Trilogy – And here we start off strong, with a package that is easily worth twice what they are charging for it. This is the perfect gift for that member of your gamer family that has yet to experience the awesomeness that is the Mass Effect Universe (you know who I’m talking about). Don’t ask, just get it.
Halo 4 – I have picked up every game in the Halo Series at launch (except Wars) and while I will be picking this game up soon, I may actually hold off a little before I pick up Halo 4. I’m still enjoying Borderlands 2 to switch games at the moment. But Halo 4 will be mine. Oh yes, it will be mine.

Week of November 13th
Tropico 4 Gold Edition
F1 Race Stars
Call of Duty: Black Ops II – I’d have to go back and look, but has a Call of Duty launched this close to a Halo game? I guess it’s been quite a while since Halo 3, but it is going to be interesting to see how the launches match up against each other.
History: Legends of War Patton – If my dad played video games, he would definitely dig these History Channel games.
The Hip Hop Dance Experience – Looking at this track listing, I’m not really sure if this is exactly a “Hip Hop” experience.
LEGO Lord of the Rings – A holiday release wouldn’t be complete without a LEGO release.
Midway Arcade Origins – How many times does Midway think we’re going to buy this? /Buys it
Sonic and All-Stars Racing Transformed Bonus Edition
Disney Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two – Coming soon: DLC characters of Luke Skywalker and Jar Jar Binks.

Week of November 20th
Family Guy: Back to the Multiverse
Rise of the Guardians: The Video Game
Hitman: Absolution
Power Rangers Samurai

Week of November 13th
Nintendo Wii U Console – Black Deluxe Set – Tempting. So very, very tempting.
Assassin’s Creed III
Scribblenauts Unlimited
Mass Effect 3 – The mind boggles at how good Mass Effect 3 will be with that secondary screen on the Wii U controller.
Game Party Champions – I see we’re getting a head start with the shovelware.
Call of Duty: Black Ops II (With Amazon Instant Video Credit)
Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two
Darksiders II
New Super Mario Bros. U – Sigh…
Transformers Prime: The Game
Wipeout 3
Just Dance 4
ESPN Sports Connection
Rabbids Land
Madden NFL 13
Ninja Gaiden 3: Razor’s Edge
ZombiU
Tank! Tank! Tank! – Sounds like an advertisement for one of those super sales at the local Convention Center: “FRIDAY FRIDAY FRIDAY!”
Tekken Tag Tournament 2 – Need I say more?
Warriors Orochi 3 Hyper
Nintendo Land
Sonic and All-Stars Racing Transformed Bonus Edition
Arkham City: Armored Edition

Week of November 6th
Pro Evolution Soccer 2013
NASCAR The Game: Inside Line

Week of November 13th
The Hip Hop Dance Experience
Disney Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two
LEGO Lord of the Rings

Week of November 20th
Rise of the Guardians: The Video Game

Week of November 6th
Harvest Moon: A New Beginning – Harvest Moon you say? Why yes, yes I would like to link my old Harvest Moon review!
Paper Mario: Sticker Star
Rayman Origins

Week of November 13th
Epic Mickey: Power of Illusion
Rabbids Rumble
Scribblenauts Unlimited

Week of November 20th
Adventure Time: Hey Ice King! Why’d you steal our garbage – Yeah, Ice King? What’s your deal?!
Rise of the Guardians: The Video Game

Week of November 20th
Adventure Time: Hey Ice King! Why’d you Steal our Garbage ?!
Rise of the Guardians: The Video Game

Week of November 6th
Mass Effect Trilogy

Week of November 13th
Tropico 4 Gold Edition
Dark Arcana: The Carnival
LEGO Lord of the Rings
History: Legends of War Patton
Angry Bird Star Wars
Call of Duty: Black Ops II

Week of November 20th
Scribblenauts Unlimited
Hitman: Absolution
Assassins Creed III
Twisted Lands: Origin

Week of November 6th
LittleBigPlanet Karting
Saints Row The Third The Full Package
Dragon Ball Z Budokai HD Collection
NASCAR The Game: Inside Line

Week of November 13th
Assassin’s Creed: Ezio Trilogy
Call of Duty: Black Ops II
Midway Arcade Origins
LEGO Lord of the Rings
F1 Race Stars
History: Legends of War Patton
Sonic and All-Stars Racing Transformed Bonus Edition
Disney Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two

Week of November 20th
Resistance: Saga Collection
PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale
Rise of the Guardians: The Video Game
Hitman: Absolution
Family Guy: Back to the Multiverse

Week of November 27th
Under Defeat
Ratchet & Clank: Full Frontal Assault

Week of November 13th
Call of Duty: Black Ops – Declassified

Week of November 20th
PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale
Persona 4 Golden

Week of November 6th
Ragnarok: Tactics
Pro Evolution Soccer 2013

What are you picking up?

(Note: As always, all Amazon.com links have our affiliate code embedded in them. If you purchase something through our link, we get a little commission. It’s appreciated.)

Filed Under: Gaming

Thrifty Thursdays – 5 Shopping Habits of the Frugal Gamer

November 1, 2012 by Jason 2 Comments

I’d like to think Frugality is one of my finer qualities when it comes to gaming. One of the greatest things about good games is that they very rarely go out of style but they do go out of popularity.

The idea behind Thrifty Thursdays here at Buttonmashing is to introduce a delightfully inexpensive alternative for your weekend or weekday gaming habits.

Between all the sales, free to play crazes, and bargains on old titles I’m sure we won’t run out of things to talk about.

So, to kick it off I’d like to provide you with a few simple tips to get your parsimonious posterior in gear.

1. Use social media to find out about discounts on popular games.  Check out Amazon Video Games on Twitter as an example.

2. Check sales on a regular basis.  Sites like Steam and Gamersgate offer daily deals.  Amazon and Good old Games offer a new  deal every week, and Gamefly hosts a used game sale once a month.

3. Hold off on new games unless you’re buying them for multiplayer.  Prices drop within months so by waiting until the fever has died down you’ll score a good deal.

4. For console games buy used.  Always.  Going hand in hand with #3 buying a used game will always save you money.  Gamestop, Best Buy, and Gamefly all offer generous return policies on used merchandise that doesn’t work.

5. Watch Buttonmashing.com.  We’re going to be bringing you a frugal gaming choice every Thursday from here on out.  Subscribe to our feed to make sure you don’t miss a single one.

Filed Under: Gaming, Thrifty Thursday

Weekend Gaming

October 26, 2012 by Tony 4 Comments

(A little late this afternoon due to being SUPER busy this week. Hopefully you’ll excuse the lack of content, too)

This will be our first weekend of crummy weather in a long time, which is probably marking the beginning of the end of fall and the approach of winter. I always feel more at home gaming when it’s cold outside and gets dark earlier in the day. When are your prime gaming times?

For this week, I think I am getting really close to finishing Borderlands 2. I know I still owe a post or two about my experience with that game, but right now my limited time means either playing the game or writing about it, and you can probably surmise I’ve been playing more than writing. So it will probably be another Borderlands 2 weekend for me. I just started the Pirates Booty DLC and have enjoyed that so far. I really like the new environment and of course all the great new loot.

Speaking of loot, we finished the five rounds in the Creature Slaughter Dome and were rewarded with Moxxxi’s Rocket Launcher which is the equivalent of a personal nuclear device. That will be getting us out of tight situations in the future.

If there’s time outside of the world of Pandora, I’ll probably dive into some PC gaming in my large, mostly unplayed Steam library. What will you be playing?

Filed Under: Weekend Gaming

Weekend Gaming

October 12, 2012 by Tony 1 Comment

So what games of the video variety do you think you’ll be playing this weekend?

Me, I am having too much fun right now with Borderlands 2 to consider playing anything else. My Commando partner and I (me, the Assassin Zero) have recently stumbled upon the Creature Slaughter Dome and had an absolute riot rampaging through the first two rounds. I have no idea how we’re going to survive three more rounds of that madness, but we are definitely going to give it a try.

BUT, I will admit that the new additions that Bioware has added to the multiplayer portion of Mass Effect 3 has me itching to get back into some multiplayer ME3. Add in the upcoming Omega DLC has me wanting more.

Oh, and pay no nevermind to those other Grade-A titles coming out all this month. Who has time for that?

What are you playing?

Filed Under: Weekend Gaming

The way Steampunk ought to be: or, a ‘Clockwork Empires’ preview

October 8, 2012 by Nick 4 Comments

Steampunk as a form of literature is contrived and stupid. Steampunk as an aesthetic, as a style, is fantastic and attractive. Although the gnarly mechanisms, clankity gizmos and outlandish outfits have origins in the literature, it has not been until recently that visual artists have taken the concept of Steampunk to the next level.The new millennium finds Steampunk just beyond the border of what is familiar. Now that our world operates silently in the aether, the sensations associated with late 19th century technology, in all its industrial grandeur, is compelling because it is recognizable, and yet, just antiquated enough to warrant a sort of mythological wonder. This is a heady visual world that operates more soundly in personal sketchpads, comic books, movies, and video games…

INDEED! To be released in 2013 for the PC and Mac

Clockwork Empires is being developed by Gaslamp Games. The game is being defined as an imperialistic city-building RTS. There is no set release date, not even an estimated quarter. So, I’m left to use some good old fashioned imagination. I’m picturing something akin to SimCity, Majesty, and perhaps Sid Meier’s Civ games – minus the turn-taking.  All of these with Steampunk characteristics in artwork and gameplay. Being that I have zero (0) artistic ability in all things visual I will relish the opportunity to build and fine-tune, however garishly, my own Steampunk-esqe city, to utilize gears and copper tubing. I will expand the empire for the glory of the Queen! Indeed, developers have mentioned that the game map will place itself outside the comfort of established cities into a fantastical, wild world inhabited by monstrous unknowns – true to the mentality of the days of yore. But in Clockwork Empires the monsters are real, and more often than not will assume the hideous form of human ambition.

pcgamer.com

The player must plan, build and micromanage: Yes, yes and yes. Each citizen in your burgeoning outpost has plans and ambitions of his own. Therefore, you cannot directly command. Instead, you must influence; thus, making this imperialistic arrangement all the more cutthroat. One must be resourceful, industrious – both being primary attributes that I visualize in a Steampunk universe. And let us not overlook the artistic intent. Steampunk is more effective when it is seen and not read about. I am made giddy by the promise that I will have a palate abundant with styles and artistic control over many elements of the game. I imagine playing dress up while mustachioed engineers in overalls outfit my zeppelins with hand-cranked railguns. rata-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat-tat Jolly good, Guvna!

As a literature, Steampunk is nothing more than a crappy off-shoot of what cyberpunk meant to represent, and represented well. Where cyberpunk was reactionary to the emerging ubiquity of the hyper-reality of the ’80s, Steampunk attained mainstream attention simply as a reaction to cyberpunk just because it, well, could – as if it had nothing better to do. Relative to its techno-noir contemporary, Steampunk offers nothing more in content than a shoddy attempt to rebuild our virtual world using late 19th century technology; A place where optical cables are copper tubes, and prosthetic limbs are constructed of old pocket-watch parts. This is not literature. It is misplaced imagination. With an opportunity like Clockwork Empires I can don the gown of Steampunk and realize my own strange and fascinating world far more effectively than any assembly of words and punctuation marks. So SHUT UP AND TAKE MY MONEY!

Filed Under: Features

When worlds collide

October 8, 2012 by Tony Leave a Comment

It’s no secret that: A) I love video games and B) I love Ohio State Football. These two loves usually don’t collide outside the yearly release of NCAA Football.

Well, this past Saturday at half-time of the Ohio State vs. Nebraska football game, the Ohio State Marching band (AKA TBDBITL) put on this show:

There are so many things in this video that I love that I can’t single any one of them out as a favorite.

The Best Damn Band In The Land, indeed.

Filed Under: Blogging

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