Comment on Best deck games for a flight? (as in...possibly running on batteries)
supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 7 months agoMost 2d games give me solid battery life
I can’t agree here, 2d games have the capacity to be extremely resource efficient but a lot of PC 2d games were developed by developers with monster gaming PCs and they never really bothered to optimize them.
CaptDust@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
Yeah I mean I definitely have games like Notia that are 2d and happily empty the battery in 2, 2.5 hours. Guess I was just speaking relatively, 2d games I can usually minimize the tdp with no performance impacts and carry on for 4 to 6 hours, compared to any average AAA 3d game that is going to have a hard stop around 1.5-3 hours.
supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 7 months ago
Xonotic would like a word
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CaptDust@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
Well lol sure, I’ll concede there’s a whole world of games that were built for spec equivalents to a smart toaster that would stretch the battery. Just nothing I’d personally want to play. We already did the 90s.
supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 7 months ago
The thing is, the genre of arena shooters basically died entirely off, there may be niches of people playing old games like Quake 3 Arena (or Quake Live, basically same thing) but there is no innovation going on, it is more like nostalgic revisiting. Xonotic (formerly known as Nexuiz) is one of the few arena shooters/movement shooters to have struck out on its own (years ago) with a movement style heavily inspired by Quake but with a much more creative and fun approach to weapons featuring alt fire modes for each weapon reminiscent of Unreal Tournament. Xonotic incorporates lessons learned from the decades the arena shooters have been around in a way other arena shooters/movement shooters have largely failed to do successfully. For example the blaster being added to the starting weapons seems like a relatively trivial choice, but it is actually key to the success of Xonotic as a game long term. The blaster being a starting weapon encourages newer players to experiment with rocket jump techniques while also putting rocket jump movement mechanics at the center of high skilled play. If you always spawn with the blaster, than it is natural to train with a focus on incorporating blaster rocket jumps into your movement at a deep level that pushes the envelope of competitive movement and positioning in the game.
For this reason, and many others I think Xonotic is definitely a game people shouldn’t just look at and think “oh, another outdated 90s shooter that plays like the rest of them that I have already played to death”, especially because Xonotic is a free and open source game that you can now download directly from most linux package managers.
I explain my thoughts further, but the post got long and I didn't want to take up a huge amount of space for people who aren't interested
___ This duel between two high level Xonotic players is a good example of the diverse dynamics to Xonotic gunplay. Movement gets EXTREMELY fast at points with huge leaps of mobility possible with the blaster, but also there are moments of slow tension and posturing. The movement in Xonotic, especially when you incorporate blaster jumps, is just fun as hell. Bunny hopping and swooping around feels so good compared to the uninspired movement mechanics of most modern shooters. www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zp5md9iRrU Ok, so I made an argument for Xonotic as not just another 90s shooter to forget about, but you might have a stereotype in your head that playing a Quake style game with joysticks like the Steam Deck has, would be hell… It is true that if you aren’t familiar with playing console shooters with a gamepad and have only ever used a mouse and keyboard (like pretty much 100% of other arena shooter players lol) you might find it difficult. However, if you have familiarity with playing halo or whatever… all you have to do is to incorporate gyroscope mouse control as a complement to your joystick aiming and once you get comfortable with it you can easily compete in most shooters with average to above average mouse and keyboard players (no autoaim required). What then about strafe jumping? Wouldn’t that be annoying pressing the jump button every time or having to hold a jump button (usually one of the face buttons, A on the xbox)? This is where Xonotic starts to get hilarious as the perfect Steam Deck shooter. Using the below control scheme strafe jumping somehow feels MORE natural with joystick movement control than with a mouse and keyboard, which sounds like an absurd claim given how this genre of shooters, next to the rts genre, is the genre of gaming that the superiority of mouse and keyboard control is considered most dominant. For someone who hasn’t played a Quake like game, it is easier to learn to strafe jump fluidly with my steam deck control scheme as you don’t have to climb the un-intuitive learning curve of developing the muscle memory for timing when to press left and right movement keys to keep momentum, you just move the joystick in the direction you want to go, your character starts automatically strafe jumping and off you go swooping around the arena at a million miles an hour lol. ---------- My steam controller mapping for Xonotic is: Gyro set to always on (set it to toggle on and off with dpad if you want) The 4 rear buttons, 2 bumpers and 2 joystick clicks are mapped to the various Xonotic weapons (number keys). Arguably superior to toggling weapons on a keyboard once you have muscle memory? You need one more mapping to get all weapons mapped, I suggest a button chord between the left and right bumper as that has worked well for me. Left joystick is mapped to a 8 Way (Overlap) directional pad with an Overlap Region setting of 4100. The Outer Command Radius is set to 29395 (might need to fiddle with this value for your particular steam deck), and the Outer Ring Command set to spacebar. That last setting is the real kicker, when you push the movement joystick (left joystick) to its full extent you automatically start strafe jumping which honestly makes strafe jumping feel more intuitive than using a keyboard and mouse. Keeping momentum through complex direction changes is also easy since the joystick is basically already integrating that for you, you just pick a direction and push the joystick. You might need to adjust these values for your particular Steam Deck. Link to video demo of me playing Xonotic with this control scheme: lostpod.space/w/wm3bjx31XikfRWYtYF7Pjg