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MMORPG.com reviewer Carolyn Koh takes a look this week at NeoSteam, the "steampunk" offering from the folks at Atlus.
Read the NeoSteam Review Cheers, |
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7/09/09 2:08:05 PM#2
Awesome review carol, I played neosteam since it's beta launch and also share alot of the same views about the game as you wrote. For me Neo Steam lost steam very quickly and couldn't hold my intereest for very long. In my "humble" opinion there is better games in the F2P space than Neo Steam, I would recommend even Runes of Magic if anyone is looking for a fantasy Hack'N'Slash. |
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7/09/09 4:46:48 PM#3
Thanks, Inktomi. I have to admit, I very much wanted to like it. The graphics are soft as a baby's bottom but looks pretty and the cutscenes are quite beautiful, however the nifty machines (luuurved the mechanical squirrel in WoW) doesn't quite make up for the lacks. Notice: The views expressed in this post are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of MMORPG.com or its management. |
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9/13/12 10:09:09 PM#4
Somehow I still don't get what a "Steampunk Game" should play or look like to others, but is it because that there are trees and grass the reason why games like these are not considered "steampunk" enough? Is it because the entire world does not look like huge dilapidated factories brimming with cogwheels, rivets, and covered in perpetual steam that it is not steampunk? I have always wondered about these since, steampunk in my head is just a matter of technological level and design. ie: you don't get to see lazer guns, and spaceships, or gaspowered cars, or nuclear bombs, electrical devices are at a minimum, computing devices are still at their infancy, and people have the habbit of over-accessorizing everything with rust colored trinkets. How much steampunk elements are necessary for anything to be considered as steampunk? |
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