Hobby #11: The Backloggery
The Backloggery is a very unique, fleshed out and functional idea. At its core, it’s a massive customizable log of all your video games. But saying that does it no justice, so I’ll go into better detail so that you may understand its full awesomeness!
The Backloggery, however it started out, has become a huge thing with video game collector and/or any kind of gamers. The basic description is that it’s a Web 2.0 website where, once you register and log in, you start “adding” logs of games from your real-life collection. You do this by putting in the name of the game, its console, your status on it (unfinished, beaten if you beat the game, complete if you’ve collected every item and completed every mission ect., or mastered if you’ve completed it and completed a user-defined challenge such as only using the weakest weapon and/or completed a “speed run” of the game. I have no mastered games, only completed, unfinished or beaten ones, but that may change soon !
), your rating on a scale of 1-4 (they really need to change that to 1-10), whether you currently own it or not, whether you’re now playing it or whether it’s on your wishlist or not, and lastly a note on the game that can be whatever you want (I usually like to keep my notes to witty comments about the part of the game I’m at).
Not only can you add games in, other people can subscribe to you and your Backloggery and comment upon it. I have added a link to my backloggery in addition to a widget featuring my newest backloggery games in the page called “Backloggery” on the pages on this blog. Please be sure to comment and/or maybe subscribe to my Backloggery!
Pros:
Easy to use interface
Addictive to add new games constantly
Many options for adding/editing games
Highly customizable
Cons:
They need a bigger rating scale :/
Sometimes it feels like there’s too many options for navigating through your games
Overall Rating: 8.5
The link is http://www.backloggery.com/. Be sure to sign up and give it a shot if you’re any kind of gamer at all, casual or not!
Hobby #10: Collectable Card Games
I have been a long-time fan of any sort of collectable card game (CCG), and have tried many. There’s just something about that smeel of a new booster pack waiting to be torn open, the fresh new cards waiting to be collected, stuffed into a card holder and put into your your/shown off to your friends/traded. Today I will explain some of these…
Yu-gi-oh. This was my first CCG obsession. It’s a bit like MTG (explained later), what with being all about the monsters and the magic. Yu-gi-oh is simple: it’s your monster vs their monsters in whatever way possible. Believe me, there are a lot of ways to obliterate the opposing monsters and whittle down the opponent’s “life points” (run out of them and you lose), whether it be by magic, traps, special monster abilities, altering the metaphorical monster battle field or a strategic yet personal combination of all three. Anyway, there’s much strategy involved.
Pokemon TCG. Pokemon is a bit of an interesting card game. I never really played that much, but it’s fun- even though it seems the booster pack designers hate you (one random energy card per booster pack!? That hardly seems fair! Heck, I could be paying 30+ bucks just to get one psychic energy for my deck that needs at least 15 energy cards to survive!). Though I guess the poor souls need the money (hehe, I can’t stop laughing after that one). Anyway, the game’s goal centers around either wiping out all your opponent’s active pokemon (very tough, since they can summon basic pokemon without almost any restriction), or defeating enough of them to where you can grab all of the opponent’s “prize cards”. This is all done by controlling your active Pokemon, of course (in lieu of the Pokemon games). Overall a fun game, but it never seemed to quite click with me completely.
Magic: the Gathering. This is one awesome game, and my current CCG obsession. I think it deserves the title of “collectable card game” more than any other because one of the main points is to collect the cards, what with many of them being promotional, tokens, extended art, and having a fleshed out rarity system, so that you can show them off to your friends (who might feel the need to kick your butt in a game of theirs due to your gloating- believe me, envy/jealousy is a very… driving force). Writing all that, I forgot to mention how in-depth and fun the game system is. Basically, you use some land cards (much like Pokemon’s energy cards), and once you’ve accumulated enough “Mana” from those, you may summon a creature (or in some cases use one’s Mana-costing abilities). This creature may then attack the opponent’s Life (like Life Points in Yu-gi-oh, see a trend here?). However, the opponent may choose to block with a creature they summoned the their “zone”. That creature is then destroyed, barely scratched or some other after effect. This is where the abilities come in. It’s very hard to find a creature without at least one I-am-only-blockable-by-X/Deal X damage to Y/target card gets X/X until Y/so many others (X and Y would be whatever the abilities state) The funny thing is that the abilities of the cards often overlap the actual MTG system’s rules. Now, after all that, do you see what I mean by in-depth? I thought so.
(Ratings for each game explained will likely be added later.)
-
Archives
- November 2008 (1)
- October 2008 (2)
- September 2008 (2)
- August 2008 (7)
-
Categories
-
RSS
Entries RSS
Comments RSS
















