Tag Archives: Podcasting

TCGP 57 – How is Vampyr Spelled?

On this luxuriously spacious episode of The College Gamers Podcast: Sorry Russia, no free Halo for you. I love when my games are remade for mobile and then ported to console. Vampyr looks unique, and not just the spelling. Xbox players can witness The Witness soon. Evolve is getting some new content. More issues arise for No Man’s Sky. Sleeping Dog developers are developing a cool looting game. Dues Ex is following in Batman’s steps. What games are we playing? And more! On this episode of The College Gamers Podcast!

Check out this episode!

iTunes here!

Stitcher here!

YouTube here!

RSS Feed here!

TCGP 56 – Left for Metal Gear Dead

On this astonishingly complex episode of The College Gamers Podcast: We see some abilities from Dishonored 2 but do robots have souls and add to your kill count? Left for Dead 3 is coming ou-oh wait, it is Metal Gear Survive. We are finely getting space combat in Battlefront. You can customize your dragon in Scalebound. Ubisoft is giving us a sports game. Taft is excited but Mike is unimpressed. Trolling just got harder in Overwatch. Ezio may be leap of faithing into your Xbox One/PS4! Creators of South Park has made a device that should never been built. We answer your emails. What are we playing? And more on THIS episode of The College Gamers Podcast!

Check out this episode!

iTunes here!

Stitcher here!

Youtube here!

RSS Feed here!

The One With Dills

On this scientifically amazing episode of The College Gamers Podcast: Dills joins us today to talk about video games! Blizzard announced when we are getting Demon Hunters and Mike is pumped. The developers of Sea of Thieves show off their game and explain what we will be doing. Elder Scrolls: Legends has now entered public Beta. Will this be a Hearthstone killer? (Hint: No) No Man’s Sky is getting a small delay for PC players. Rockstar has something cooking and we discuss what we would like to see. We talk about some major changes coming to Civ 6. StarCraft might be getting an HD remake. What games are we talking about. A lot of off topic conversation. And more! On this episode of The College Gamers Podcast!

Check out this episode!

iTunes here!

Stitcher here!

Youtube here!

RSS Feed here!

Dumb Ideas #1: Give Me A Modulor Console

Buying hardware for a console player is a different experience than hardware shopping for a PC player. For most console players, the choice of hardware is narrowed down to two options. The announcement of the Xbox One S, Scorpio, and Neo has complicated this question but, simplified, a console player really just needs to select Xbox or Playstation. A PC gamer always has the option to buy a rebuilt rig but that can be expensive. For the cheapest and most customizable option, PC Gamers build their own rigs. This includes choosing parts, checking compatibility, as well as making sure everything fits. But, this allows gamers to choose where they want to put their money. Consoles could go the same style but it would take a complete overall of the way console developers build their brand.

Consoles are basically dedicated PC’s for gaming. The only difference is that consoles have very standardized hardware and software. Instead of selling console gamers an entire box, allow third parties to sell hardware parts. To simplify the consoles, companies could break down the consoles into 4 parts: The CPU, the graphic cards, the motherboard + memory, and the case. AMD already supplies the Xbox One and PlayStation with CPUs. The next iteration of consoles could be designed to use PC graphic cards. Microsoft and Sony would sell rights to companies for creating hardware. Rather than buying a new console every few years, allowing players to upgrade individual parts when they become outdated makes the transition to better technologies smoother and cheaper for the user. Consoles would be able to keep up with PC performance, rather than the console becoming more obsolete as the years pass between iteration.

Console makers would then focus have to give more attention to the operating system. Similar to how Windows and MacOS compete with one another. By focusing on the OS of the box, resources that were previously spent on hardware would now be free to add better features to the operating system. Console exclusives would instead become OS exclusives. Console makers would of course still sell pre-built consoles. Because the idea of plug and play never gets old and PC gaming is hard.

Would would you like to see changed in the console ecosystem? Leave a comment!

Want more? Check out The College Gamers Podcast

Why Hearthstone’s Invite-A-Friend System is Broken

Last Month Hearthstone implemented an “Invite-A-Friend” system for the game. Players use a link to invite new players to play Hearthstone and the link used would bind the accounts together. For inviting one player and the invited player reaching level 20, the Original player would receive Morgle the Oracle, a (very awesome) Shaman class hero. A player gets a free card pack for each friend that reaches level 20 once the fifth friend reaches level 20. Hearthstone is a free to play card game that has been out for 2011. At this point in Hearthstone’s life, the amount of gamers that have not discovered Hearthstone is a very small number. Joining Hearthstone can seem like a daunting task. Hundreds of cards have been added through multiple expansions and it can be intimidating to try to collect them all, which is required to compete competitively. Many people may have the problem where none of their friends are interested in Hearthstone (like myself). Many Hearthstone players will probably resort to using a second personal email to create a new account and grind their way to level 20 for Morgle.

Blizzard could keep players around by incentivizing friends who are linked to play with each other. Once a player reaches a certain level, such as 20 or 30, let friends earn quest credit by playing friends. Limit this to one quest a week or unlimited quests for a limited amount of time. The level requirement and the time limit put on these perks would reduce the amount of fraudulent accounts created.

Every plan has its own set of flaws while at the same time requiring a good enough incentive for players to go through the trouble of talking friends and family into playing.

Have an idea of how to the invite-a-friend system should work? Leave a comment!

Want more? Check out The College Gamers Podcast

Why More Games Are Pushing for eSports

In the past few years, we have seen game developers making pushes into the eSports realm. Some of these companies include Activision-Blizzard and more recently, EA. As eSports grow in popularity, more traditional sport outlets are taking notice. TBS has broadcasted a CS:GO tournament while even the sport juggernaut, ESPN, has dedicated a corner of its website to eSports and the occasional broadcast on ESPN-2. What might be some of the draws for game developers to promote their game as an eSport?

There are many reasons why a game developer would want their game as a popular eSport. To begin with the obvious, the publicity is kind of a big deal. Seeing pro gamers play is always exciting. They play at a higher level than us mere mortals, which adds an elevated level of excitement and fun. This fused for a lethal combination of “I want to try this game”. In other words, eSports is an effective way of reaching an audience that might not have played the game otherwise. Also, the company’s share of the advertising revenue does not hurt.

However, eSport popularity can be a double edged sword. An eSport game needs to hold the attention of not only the public but the eSport teams as well. If a game can attract the best eSport teams then the fans are sure to follow. With big cash tournaments, games attempting to be the next big eSport can attract the biggest players in eSports, which brings more viewers. However, if an eSport can’t afford cash prizes as big as competitors they are doomed to be overshadowed by other games. By staying in the eSport cycle, it keeps the attention of fans and players alike. Overall, eSports can seriously add to the longevity of a game.

Have a comment? Contact me at bluecowradio@gmail.com!
Want more? Check out The College Gamers Podcast!

One Year Episode: Ep 54

One this extra awesome episode of The College Gamers Podcast: Mike and Taft celebrate on year of this show! Overwatch got a new character. Civilization is looking awesome if you preorder. Gwent will be cross platform if Sony is up to it. World of Warcraft got it’s pre-expansion patch with lots of exciting changes. Two characters were revealed for Injustice 2. And Nvidia drops an amazing new card out of no where. Mike and taft quiz each other. We announce the winner of our Facebook contest. What games are we playing? And more on this AWESOME episode of The College Gamers Podcast!

Check out this episode!

iTunes here!

Stitcher here!

Youtube here!

RSS Feed here!

The College Gamers Podcast (feat Cami) Ep 53

On this absurdly organized episode of The College Gamers Podcast: Cami joins me this week while Taft is out. We are holding our first contest ever! Mike is super excited for next week! Pokemon GO is everywhere. Oh my gosh guys. Seriously. I am catching Pokemon as I write this. World of Warcraft is getting a new silencing policy for trolls. Fallout Shelter is coming to PC and brings new quests with it. Blizzard announces a new character for Overwatch and it looks AWESOME! What are we playing? And more on this episode of The College Gamers Podcast!

Check out this episode!

iTunes here!

Stitcher here!

Youtube here!

RSS Feed here!

PC Gaming is hard

Recently, I was browsing the interwebs in search of a memory upgrade for my gaming rig. I have upgraded parts in the past, graphics card, CPU, even my motherboard. I would stand proudly and say none of them went as planned. When I say that PC Gaming has one hell of a learning curve I am not lying. For those of us, like myself, that do not have a friend that has already gone through the stresses of upgrading or building a rig, doing it ourselves is full of unexpected and not so pleasant surprises. As I was browsing memory for my rig, I had to check that the frequency was compatible with my motherboard. Was the voltage too high? Was it the correct type of memory? Could my motherboard overclock it if I wanted to? This is when I realized a simple truth: PC Gaming is, in fact, hard.

Now, do not get me wrong. For those of us that demand the highest performance for the very best experience, PC Gaming is the only option. It is more flexible than console gaming. You can upgrade individual parts as often as you like, and trust me, there is no cap to the amount of money one can spend on PC gaming rigs. This is because PC gaming is a black hole of money. You can always buy a graphics card that is a slightly better or a CPU that is a bit faster. Hell, you can throw money at all the storage you want. In half a year, it is all obsolete anyway. The newest, bestest, shiniest, fastest, coolest thing is always around the corner. Now, as you spend more money on the super gaming rig of your dreams, the price to performance increase slowly dwindles. Most modern video games only utilize four cores at a time so spending $2000 on a 10 core CPU really won’t get you that much of an approvement. Unless you are developing games, video processing, or password hashing, you really don’t need a super CPU. Oh, but those sweet sweet bragging rights.  

Compatibility can be a harsh mistress. Luckly for those of us that have not quite aquired the talent, there are helpful websites like pcpartpicker.com that only matches parts that are compatible. However, I always take these websites with a grain of salt. I still have a liquid CPU cooler on my dresser from half a year ago because everything told me it would fit. Unfortunately, I have a weird tower that places the power supply at the top.

Sometimes I do envy console gaming. The safety of buying a game and knowing it will work must be nice. But I demand better performance than consoles cannot deliver. Risk it for the biscuit.
I, personally, love PC gaming. After all the stress and research is done it can be fun and satisfying.

The College Gamers Podcast Ep 52

On this distractingly homework-free episode of The College Gamers Podcast: Evolve is going free to play. Witcher 3 is indeed getting a Game of the Year Edition. Overwatch is getting is first new character since its’ release! Red Dead Redemption runs better on Xbox One and Mike learns why that is news. Team Fortress 2 is getting Competitive Mode but is it too late? State of Decay is getting a retail version for it’s PC players. Fallout 4 is getting it’s last DLC and are Mike and Taft satisfied with the list? What are we playing and more on this awesome episode of The College Gamers Podcast!

Check out this episode!

iTunes here!

Stitcher here!

Youtube here!

RSS Feed here!