The Old PlayStation Thread | *NEW THREAD IS UP*

Is it really that hard to find. Was at my BB on Black Friday and they had like 100 stacked. Plus all kinds of people walking around with them.

Sony posts record Black Friday hardware sales
Head of PSN Eric Lempel says company sold more PlayStations over the weekend than in the 23-year history of the brand









UK charts: PS4 and PSVR enjoy a strong Black Friday
PlayStation VR sold more than in the previous 18 weeks combined,
strongest week of the year for software units and revenue

According to the Ukie Gfk charts, PlayStation 4 had its strongest Black Friday week since 2013, the same week that the console launched. Sales of PlayStation VR, meanwhile, were "on a par" with the headset's launch week, and equivalent to the total sold through in the preceding 18 weeks.

Last Week This Week Title
1 1 Call of Duty: WWII
3 2 FIFA 18
12 3 Gran Turismo: Sport
2 4 Star Wars Battlefront 2
6 5 Assassin's Creed Origins
15 6 Forza Motorsport 7
18 7 Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus
9 8 Super Mario Odyssey
23 9 Fallout 4
11 10 Need for Speed Payback

Reading from people's experiences, it seems the 199 1TB cleaned house.

PSVR also got a big jump and Skyrim VR is holding too.
Good to see.
 
Last edited:
PS4 at $200 was definitely a steal. A couple of homies who were always pro Xbox picked up a PS4 since it was such a good deal.

Got the whole squad on WW2 just running through teams earlier. Just like the good old days back on 360
 
What was everyone's haul yesterday? Ended up getting Wolfenstein 2 for 25, NBA 2K for 27, South Park for 34.99 and AC Origins for 29.99

Bought like 10 blu ray's and got a pair of Primeknit NMD's and called it a day :pimp:

ps store:
mummy demastered
wolf 2+ season pass
evil within 2
horizon + frozen wilds
rotr20th
dying light the following
dishonored death of the outsider
nier automata

physical:
wwii

grabbed a samsung soundbar w/ subwoofer on deep sale from bb and some black/black sock darts for $30 :lol:

shouldve got a soundbar a long time ago
normandy invasion w/ the subwoofer :wow: :pimp:
 
Pretty good write up on AC Origins that I seen on ResetERA

#1
Having put around 15 hours into Assassin's Creed Originson its first weekend of release, I'm a little surprised at the critical reception it's been receiving, considering that I find so many aspects of it to be extremely impressive. Part of this reception might be due to the fact that it says Assassin's Creed on the box, as the series has developed quite a lot of baggage over the years.

The irony is that this game doesn't really have too much in common with prior entries in the series. Yes you climb buildings. Yes you have a hidden blade. Yes there's a sci-fi meta-story built around the historical setting. But as a whole the game feels most like a pseudo-sequel to The Witcher 3, capturing its strengths (i.e. storytelling, exploration) and fixing a lot of its weaknesses (i.e. combat, movement). I'd like to run down just a few high-level aspects of AC: Origins that I think make it one of the best games I've played all year:

Storytelling
  • The stories in AC: Origins evoke the entire spectrum of emotions. Gone is the melodrama of past games in the series (and most video games in general). Instead you'll experience stories that evoke laughter as often as they evoke anger or sadness. Characters in AC: Origins are motivated not just by being inherently "good" or "evil", but by relatable human emotions such as vanity, rivalry, fear, loneliness, pettiness, sexuality, social awkwardness, and regret.
  • Dialogue is believable and economic, subtly hinting at character motivations rather than clumsily beating the player over the head with them.
  • Voice acting is stellar, and varied between NPCs depending on factors such as age, race and region.
  • Quests feed into each other in AC: Origins in a way that matches and in some ways exceeds those in The Witcher 3. At its best, The Witcher 3 had characters from one quest that had been impacted by characters from other quests, and that consequently gave the player the feeling of discovering a culture or society, where people were affected by one another and had history with one another. AC: Origins uses this same technique, tying together the stories of characters not just between side quests but between side quests and main quests. In addition, AC: Origins features side quest "chains", where completion of one side quest often immediately starts another, continuing the storyline with a particular set of characters.
  • During the few missions you'll come across that involve walking and talking with an NPC, this game implements the same NPC sprinting system that was first seen in The Witcher 3: you can move as fast or as slow as you want, and the NPC will match his or her speed with yours to ensure that they stay next to/in front of you.
Exploration
  • The game world is absolutely gigantic, on the scale of Breath of the Wild. However unlike in Zelda, the world of AC: Origins is filled out with hundreds of villages, cities, and landmarks, but most importantly stories.
  • The movement system finally feels good. No more holding right trigger to sprint. No more using left trigger in conjunction with a face button to enter windows. Now you just move with the stick. Climb up onto a wall with A, and descend with B. It's simple and it works, and I can say that I've rarely if ever had any instances of accidentally jumping off a building to my death, which happened quite frequently in past Assassin's Creed games. In addition, handholds are much more plentiful and generous than they've ever been, putting the game closer to how you could climb pretty much any surface in Breath of the Wild. When climbing rocky terrain, you can pretty much climb anything.
  • The main questline of AC: Origins is surprisingly quite nonlinear, with multiple main story quests available to tackle at any given time. Think of it like if The Witcher 3 had allowed the player to do Velan, Novigrad, and Skellige in any order. These main quests are assigned a recommended level to be at before starting, but unlike in AC: Syndicate where main missions were functionally gated behind grinding through busywork, in AC: Origins this is more a slight push to explore and discover new locations and side quests, as pretty much everything in this game grants you some amount of XP.
Combat
  • The melee combat is directly inspired by the Soulsborne games, complete with light/heavy attacks, committing to attack animations, parries, and the dodge from Bloodborne. The combat system takes a little getting used to, but once you do it becomes a just-as-fun alternative to stealthing your way through encounters.
  • For the first time in the series, the player gets a bow that operates much like those found in Horizon Zero Dawn and the new Tomb Raider games. However, AC: Origins builds on this concept, adding in 4 different flavors of bow each with different firing patterns: one fires like a rifle (normal bow from those other games), one like an AR (rapid fire), one like a sniper (long range, slow rate of fire), and one like a shotgun (low range, high damage).
  • The skill tree contains several cool abilities taken straight from Horizon Zero Dawn, such as slow motion aiming when mid-air, and the ability to highlight the path of enemies.
  • In AC: Origins, fire behaves similarly to how it did in Breath of the Wild. It spreads through fields of grass and over objects made of wood (such as boats), and the player can light the tip of their arrow on fire by pulling out their bow and touching the arrow to a torch or other flame.
Immersion
  • With the health bar moved to the bottom of the screen, and the minimap swapped out for an Elder Scrolls-style compass located at the very top of the screen, overall the HUD is very uncluttered and less intrusive than it's ever been
  • 2 aspects of AC: Origins are designed to keep the player out of menus and focused on the game world:
    • While a world map can be found in the menus, a much more functional and aesthetically pleasing alternative is the game’s inclusion of Senu, Bayek’s eagle. Much like the drone from Watch Dogs 2, at any moment Senu can be used to soar high above the landscape to locate points of interest.
    • At nearly all times, the player has the ability to fast forward between day and night with a long press of the select button (left side of the PS4 touch pad)
  • If the player moves at a walking speed, the camera actually slowly pulls in towards Bayek. The camera becomes much like the original camera shown off for The Witcher 3, which was later used in Horizon Zero Dawn when the player entered a town. It really heightens the sense of scale when looking at a large, imposing structure, of which there are many in this game.
  • Similar to what you would see in a Naughty Dog game, Bayek also performs a number of contextual animations depending on the situation. These include but are not limited to:
    • If the player crouches next to a cat, Bayek will pet it.
    • If the player walks up to a sconce while carrying a torch, Bayek will use his torch to light it.
    • If the player walks through a doorway while carrying a torch, Bayek will adjust his arm so that the torch does not touch the edges of the door.
    • If the player walks through a field of grass, Bayek will reach out and run his hand through the grass.
  • There are numerous outfits you can acquire which have a bandanna or something similar over Bayek's mouth. When wearing one of these outfits, Bayek's voice is slightly muffled in conversations with NPCs, while it is still crystal clear whenever he talks to himself.

Finally, just wanted to make mention of a couple great PC-specific features that Ubi took the time and effort to include:
  • Fantastic ultrawide support
  • FOV slider
  • Built-in performance monitoring tool available in both the benchmark and while in-game
  • Built-in FPS limiter

tl;dr: Rather than building off of the Assassin's Creedformula that Ubisoft has been using for the last decade, Assassin's Creed Origins instead feels like it used The Witcher 3 as a baseline, and then built on top of that in numerous ways both large and small. It incorporates numerous elements from other recent high profile games such as Breath of the Wild and Horizon Zero Dawn, but executes them all in a way that makes the game feel cohesive, and not just a mess of different systems layered on top of one another.

So regardless of your feelings on the Assassin's Creedfranchise, if The Witcher 3 was your 2015 GOTY, I think you owe it to yourself to give this game a try. And if The Witcher 3 wasn't your 2015 GOTY because you had complaints about the gameplay, AC: Origins makes such a vast amount of gameplay improvements over TW3 that I think it's still worth giving it a try.
 
Man I might need to cop AC:Origins. That is one hell of a write up
Seriously i f AC games are this good with a few years development time, I hope Ubi allows to take time off and stop with the annual releases. Hell they can stagger releases with AC, Watch Dogs and Far Cry.
 
Pretty good write up on AC Origins that I seen on ResetERA

#1
Having put around 15 hours into Assassin's Creed Originson its first weekend of release, I'm a little surprised at the critical reception it's been receiving, considering that I find so many aspects of it to be extremely impressive. Part of this reception might be due to the fact that it says Assassin's Creed on the box, as the series has developed quite a lot of baggage over the years.

The irony is that this game doesn't really have too much in common with prior entries in the series. Yes you climb buildings. Yes you have a hidden blade. Yes there's a sci-fi meta-story built around the historical setting. But as a whole the game feels most like a pseudo-sequel to The Witcher 3, capturing its strengths (i.e. storytelling, exploration) and fixing a lot of its weaknesses (i.e. combat, movement). I'd like to run down just a few high-level aspects of AC: Origins that I think make it one of the best games I've played all year:

Storytelling
  • The stories in AC: Origins evoke the entire spectrum of emotions. Gone is the melodrama of past games in the series (and most video games in general). Instead you'll experience stories that evoke laughter as often as they evoke anger or sadness. Characters in AC: Origins are motivated not just by being inherently "good" or "evil", but by relatable human emotions such as vanity, rivalry, fear, loneliness, pettiness, sexuality, social awkwardness, and regret.
  • Dialogue is believable and economic, subtly hinting at character motivations rather than clumsily beating the player over the head with them.
  • Voice acting is stellar, and varied between NPCs depending on factors such as age, race and region.
  • Quests feed into each other in AC: Origins in a way that matches and in some ways exceeds those in The Witcher 3. At its best, The Witcher 3 had characters from one quest that had been impacted by characters from other quests, and that consequently gave the player the feeling of discovering a culture or society, where people were affected by one another and had history with one another. AC: Origins uses this same technique, tying together the stories of characters not just between side quests but between side quests and main quests. In addition, AC: Origins features side quest "chains", where completion of one side quest often immediately starts another, continuing the storyline with a particular set of characters.
  • During the few missions you'll come across that involve walking and talking with an NPC, this game implements the same NPC sprinting system that was first seen in The Witcher 3: you can move as fast or as slow as you want, and the NPC will match his or her speed with yours to ensure that they stay next to/in front of you.
Exploration
  • The game world is absolutely gigantic, on the scale of Breath of the Wild. However unlike in Zelda, the world of AC: Origins is filled out with hundreds of villages, cities, and landmarks, but most importantly stories.
  • The movement system finally feels good. No more holding right trigger to sprint. No more using left trigger in conjunction with a face button to enter windows. Now you just move with the stick. Climb up onto a wall with A, and descend with B. It's simple and it works, and I can say that I've rarely if ever had any instances of accidentally jumping off a building to my death, which happened quite frequently in past Assassin's Creed games. In addition, handholds are much more plentiful and generous than they've ever been, putting the game closer to how you could climb pretty much any surface in Breath of the Wild. When climbing rocky terrain, you can pretty much climb anything.
  • The main questline of AC: Origins is surprisingly quite nonlinear, with multiple main story quests available to tackle at any given time. Think of it like if The Witcher 3 had allowed the player to do Velan, Novigrad, and Skellige in any order. These main quests are assigned a recommended level to be at before starting, but unlike in AC: Syndicate where main missions were functionally gated behind grinding through busywork, in AC: Origins this is more a slight push to explore and discover new locations and side quests, as pretty much everything in this game grants you some amount of XP.
Combat
  • The melee combat is directly inspired by the Soulsborne games, complete with light/heavy attacks, committing to attack animations, parries, and the dodge from Bloodborne. The combat system takes a little getting used to, but once you do it becomes a just-as-fun alternative to stealthing your way through encounters.
  • For the first time in the series, the player gets a bow that operates much like those found in Horizon Zero Dawn and the new Tomb Raider games. However, AC: Origins builds on this concept, adding in 4 different flavors of bow each with different firing patterns: one fires like a rifle (normal bow from those other games), one like an AR (rapid fire), one like a sniper (long range, slow rate of fire), and one like a shotgun (low range, high damage).
  • The skill tree contains several cool abilities taken straight from Horizon Zero Dawn, such as slow motion aiming when mid-air, and the ability to highlight the path of enemies.
  • In AC: Origins, fire behaves similarly to how it did in Breath of the Wild. It spreads through fields of grass and over objects made of wood (such as boats), and the player can light the tip of their arrow on fire by pulling out their bow and touching the arrow to a torch or other flame.
Immersion
  • With the health bar moved to the bottom of the screen, and the minimap swapped out for an Elder Scrolls-style compass located at the very top of the screen, overall the HUD is very uncluttered and less intrusive than it's ever been
  • 2 aspects of AC: Origins are designed to keep the player out of menus and focused on the game world:
    • While a world map can be found in the menus, a much more functional and aesthetically pleasing alternative is the game’s inclusion of Senu, Bayek’s eagle. Much like the drone from Watch Dogs 2, at any moment Senu can be used to soar high above the landscape to locate points of interest.
    • At nearly all times, the player has the ability to fast forward between day and night with a long press of the select button (left side of the PS4 touch pad)
  • If the player moves at a walking speed, the camera actually slowly pulls in towards Bayek. The camera becomes much like the original camera shown off for The Witcher 3, which was later used in Horizon Zero Dawn when the player entered a town. It really heightens the sense of scale when looking at a large, imposing structure, of which there are many in this game.
  • Similar to what you would see in a Naughty Dog game, Bayek also performs a number of contextual animations depending on the situation. These include but are not limited to:
    • If the player crouches next to a cat, Bayek will pet it.
    • If the player walks up to a sconce while carrying a torch, Bayek will use his torch to light it.
    • If the player walks through a doorway while carrying a torch, Bayek will adjust his arm so that the torch does not touch the edges of the door.
    • If the player walks through a field of grass, Bayek will reach out and run his hand through the grass.
  • There are numerous outfits you can acquire which have a bandanna or something similar over Bayek's mouth. When wearing one of these outfits, Bayek's voice is slightly muffled in conversations with NPCs, while it is still crystal clear whenever he talks to himself.

Finally, just wanted to make mention of a couple great PC-specific features that Ubi took the time and effort to include:
  • Fantastic ultrawide support
  • FOV slider
  • Built-in performance monitoring tool available in both the benchmark and while in-game
  • Built-in FPS limiter

tl;dr: Rather than building off of the Assassin's Creedformula that Ubisoft has been using for the last decade, Assassin's Creed Origins instead feels like it used The Witcher 3 as a baseline, and then built on top of that in numerous ways both large and small. It incorporates numerous elements from other recent high profile games such as Breath of the Wild and Horizon Zero Dawn, but executes them all in a way that makes the game feel cohesive, and not just a mess of different systems layered on top of one another.

So regardless of your feelings on the Assassin's Creedfranchise, if The Witcher 3 was your 2015 GOTY, I think you owe it to yourself to give this game a try. And if The Witcher 3 wasn't your 2015 GOTY because you had complaints about the gameplay, AC: Origins makes such a vast amount of gameplay improvements over TW3 that I think it's still worth giving it a try.

giphy.gif
 
Seriously i f AC games are this good with a few years development time, I hope Ubi allows to take time off and stop with the annual releases. Hell they can stagger releases with AC, Watch Dogs and Far Cry.
They need to re do far cry still a great game but it's becoming stale imo
 
Seriously i f AC games are this good with a few years development time, I hope Ubi allows to take time off and stop with the annual releases. Hell they can stagger releases with AC, Watch Dogs and Far Cry.

Exactly! Far Cry 5 comes out in a few months right?

They need to re do far cry still a great game but it's becoming stale imo

Yeah it just Far Cry 3 but with different themes.
 
Pretty good write up on AC Origins that I seen on ResetERA

#1
Having put around 15 hours into Assassin's Creed Originson its first weekend of release, I'm a little surprised at the critical reception it's been receiving, considering that I find so many aspects of it to be extremely impressive. Part of this reception might be due to the fact that it says Assassin's Creed on the box, as the series has developed quite a lot of baggage over the years.

The irony is that this game doesn't really have too much in common with prior entries in the series. Yes you climb buildings. Yes you have a hidden blade. Yes there's a sci-fi meta-story built around the historical setting. But as a whole the game feels most like a pseudo-sequel to The Witcher 3, capturing its strengths (i.e. storytelling, exploration) and fixing a lot of its weaknesses (i.e. combat, movement). I'd like to run down just a few high-level aspects of AC: Origins that I think make it one of the best games I've played all year:

Storytelling
  • The stories in AC: Origins evoke the entire spectrum of emotions. Gone is the melodrama of past games in the series (and most video games in general). Instead you'll experience stories that evoke laughter as often as they evoke anger or sadness. Characters in AC: Origins are motivated not just by being inherently "good" or "evil", but by relatable human emotions such as vanity, rivalry, fear, loneliness, pettiness, sexuality, social awkwardness, and regret.
  • Dialogue is believable and economic, subtly hinting at character motivations rather than clumsily beating the player over the head with them.
  • Voice acting is stellar, and varied between NPCs depending on factors such as age, race and region.
  • Quests feed into each other in AC: Origins in a way that matches and in some ways exceeds those in The Witcher 3. At its best, The Witcher 3 had characters from one quest that had been impacted by characters from other quests, and that consequently gave the player the feeling of discovering a culture or society, where people were affected by one another and had history with one another. AC: Origins uses this same technique, tying together the stories of characters not just between side quests but between side quests and main quests. In addition, AC: Origins features side quest "chains", where completion of one side quest often immediately starts another, continuing the storyline with a particular set of characters.
  • During the few missions you'll come across that involve walking and talking with an NPC, this game implements the same NPC sprinting system that was first seen in The Witcher 3: you can move as fast or as slow as you want, and the NPC will match his or her speed with yours to ensure that they stay next to/in front of you.
Exploration
  • The game world is absolutely gigantic, on the scale of Breath of the Wild. However unlike in Zelda, the world of AC: Origins is filled out with hundreds of villages, cities, and landmarks, but most importantly stories.
  • The movement system finally feels good. No more holding right trigger to sprint. No more using left trigger in conjunction with a face button to enter windows. Now you just move with the stick. Climb up onto a wall with A, and descend with B. It's simple and it works, and I can say that I've rarely if ever had any instances of accidentally jumping off a building to my death, which happened quite frequently in past Assassin's Creed games. In addition, handholds are much more plentiful and generous than they've ever been, putting the game closer to how you could climb pretty much any surface in Breath of the Wild. When climbing rocky terrain, you can pretty much climb anything.
  • The main questline of AC: Origins is surprisingly quite nonlinear, with multiple main story quests available to tackle at any given time. Think of it like if The Witcher 3 had allowed the player to do Velan, Novigrad, and Skellige in any order. These main quests are assigned a recommended level to be at before starting, but unlike in AC: Syndicate where main missions were functionally gated behind grinding through busywork, in AC: Origins this is more a slight push to explore and discover new locations and side quests, as pretty much everything in this game grants you some amount of XP.
Combat
  • The melee combat is directly inspired by the Soulsborne games, complete with light/heavy attacks, committing to attack animations, parries, and the dodge from Bloodborne. The combat system takes a little getting used to, but once you do it becomes a just-as-fun alternative to stealthing your way through encounters.
  • For the first time in the series, the player gets a bow that operates much like those found in Horizon Zero Dawn and the new Tomb Raider games. However, AC: Origins builds on this concept, adding in 4 different flavors of bow each with different firing patterns: one fires like a rifle (normal bow from those other games), one like an AR (rapid fire), one like a sniper (long range, slow rate of fire), and one like a shotgun (low range, high damage).
  • The skill tree contains several cool abilities taken straight from Horizon Zero Dawn, such as slow motion aiming when mid-air, and the ability to highlight the path of enemies.
  • In AC: Origins, fire behaves similarly to how it did in Breath of the Wild. It spreads through fields of grass and over objects made of wood (such as boats), and the player can light the tip of their arrow on fire by pulling out their bow and touching the arrow to a torch or other flame.
Immersion
  • With the health bar moved to the bottom of the screen, and the minimap swapped out for an Elder Scrolls-style compass located at the very top of the screen, overall the HUD is very uncluttered and less intrusive than it's ever been
  • 2 aspects of AC: Origins are designed to keep the player out of menus and focused on the game world:
    • While a world map can be found in the menus, a much more functional and aesthetically pleasing alternative is the game’s inclusion of Senu, Bayek’s eagle. Much like the drone from Watch Dogs 2, at any moment Senu can be used to soar high above the landscape to locate points of interest.
    • At nearly all times, the player has the ability to fast forward between day and night with a long press of the select button (left side of the PS4 touch pad)
  • If the player moves at a walking speed, the camera actually slowly pulls in towards Bayek. The camera becomes much like the original camera shown off for The Witcher 3, which was later used in Horizon Zero Dawn when the player entered a town. It really heightens the sense of scale when looking at a large, imposing structure, of which there are many in this game.
  • Similar to what you would see in a Naughty Dog game, Bayek also performs a number of contextual animations depending on the situation. These include but are not limited to:
    • If the player crouches next to a cat, Bayek will pet it.
    • If the player walks up to a sconce while carrying a torch, Bayek will use his torch to light it.
    • If the player walks through a doorway while carrying a torch, Bayek will adjust his arm so that the torch does not touch the edges of the door.
    • If the player walks through a field of grass, Bayek will reach out and run his hand through the grass.
  • There are numerous outfits you can acquire which have a bandanna or something similar over Bayek's mouth. When wearing one of these outfits, Bayek's voice is slightly muffled in conversations with NPCs, while it is still crystal clear whenever he talks to himself.

Finally, just wanted to make mention of a couple great PC-specific features that Ubi took the time and effort to include:
  • Fantastic ultrawide support
  • FOV slider
  • Built-in performance monitoring tool available in both the benchmark and while in-game
  • Built-in FPS limiter

tl;dr: Rather than building off of the Assassin's Creedformula that Ubisoft has been using for the last decade, Assassin's Creed Origins instead feels like it used The Witcher 3 as a baseline, and then built on top of that in numerous ways both large and small. It incorporates numerous elements from other recent high profile games such as Breath of the Wild and Horizon Zero Dawn, but executes them all in a way that makes the game feel cohesive, and not just a mess of different systems layered on top of one another.

So regardless of your feelings on the Assassin's Creedfranchise, if The Witcher 3 was your 2015 GOTY, I think you owe it to yourself to give this game a try. And if The Witcher 3 wasn't your 2015 GOTY because you had complaints about the gameplay, AC: Origins makes such a vast amount of gameplay improvements over TW3 that I think it's still worth giving it a try.

Nice. Now they just need to optimize the PC version from what I've heard
 
Really happy with my x900e and my PS4 pro. Was playing Fallout 4 last night and it was a world of difference. The draw distance and the graphics look amazing, and the frame rate is very smooth.
One of the best games I ever played
 
Back
Top Bottom