Friday, 18 June 2021

The Shutokou Racing (Game Boy Color)


 I think I've mentioned this before, but I really like the simple top down racing games that have SEGA's Monaco GP as their patient zero. Zippy Race, Rally Bike, Mad Gear, that kind of thing. It was very much a genre of the eighties, though, and 1998 seems like a very late time to be releasing one, even on the Game Boy Color. This is only conjecture, but I feel like The Shutokou Racing was probably a passion project by someone who was themselves a fan of the genre, and wondered to themselves how it might be modified, and made into a longer, more "console-like" experience.

 


I'm sure that last sentence has struck dread into the hearts of some readers, and I have to say your suspicions are correct: this game is a grinding festival. Basically, there are four races, and the place in which you finish one race is your starting position in the next race. You've got a number of lives that deplete every time you crash (the starting number determined by your equipment), and running out of lives is the only way to get a game over. Instead, finishing a race, no matter where you place in the ranking, gets you some prize money. If you aren't in first place by the end of race four, the season restarts, but your money and equipment carry over. So you're expected to just keep failing until you're eventually rich enough to get the upgrades needed to go fast enough and win the season. 

 


Then you can play the second season, which is harder, faster, and more exciting, though it still relies on the cyclical grinding structure. There's also a "Classic Mode", which is a much simpler game, harkening back to the original Monaco GP, with enemy cars just mindlessly bouncing left and right off the sides of the track. Unfortunately, it's a lot slower than the original, even on hard difficulty. Another thing to note is that the game's main mode even has the "ambulance of death" that occasionally zooms up from the bottom of the screen, wrecking all in its path, which is also very specifically a Monaco GP reference.

 


Though I hate grinding in action games as much as any other sane person, in this case, I don't think it's a gamekiller, at least. The fact that the game's on a handheld makes it a nice little thing to occupy the mind while semi-watching some mediocre TV or something. I'd have preferred something closer to the arcade games mentioned up at the start of this post, but The Shutokou Racing isn't a total write off.

Monday, 14 June 2021

Other Stuff Monthly #18!


 Wow, what a long month it's been! Feels more like eight of them, doesn't it? Anyway, I'm finally able to start getting though the backlog of board games that's built up from Kickstarters and cheap online sales over the past year or so, and as such, I've regained the motivation to make these posts (though having said that, there isn't going to be a sudden string of monthly board game posts. I've got other stuff to cover, too). First up is a game that sat on my shelf for months, the communist-themed worker placement game Red Outpost!

 


Set in an alternate (better?) world where the USSR never ended and ventually made its way to the stars, the players take the role of the people in charge of a newly founded Soviet space colony, telling which workers to go where and at what time. It creates an interesting dynamic, as while you are competing for victory points, resources that might be in seperate player pools in other games, like workers, and the resources they produce, are instead communal. During the game, you get points for instructing workers to produce efficiently, but the big scoring happens after each day (there are two days in a game, and each day is broken down into five phases), when the mood of each worker is assessed, and each player who moved that worker during the day scores points based on both the worker's mood and how many times they moved them.

 


You can improve a worker's mood by sending them to do a job at which they're skilled (send the fisherman to fish, the shepherd to the pasture, and so on), or by giving them time off. Conversely, if you think one player stands to rake in a lot of points from a certain worker, there are also ways to decrease their mood, like sending them to do an ill-fitting job, framing them for stealing from the warehouse, or even having them spend some time in the gulag. So you can try and risk putting all your eggs in one basket for a big payoff at the end, or try and keep a few workers at slightly above-average levels of happiness, or you can concentrate on sabotaging the other players and making their favoured workers unhappy.

 


It took a few turns to really get into the swing of Red Outpost, but once we did, it was a really fun game. I think the Soviet theme really comes through in the game mechanics, and it's also a game with a lot of player interaction and opportunities for aggressive or sneaky play. I'm not sure if they're in the retail version, or if they're Kickstarter only, but the components are also really high quality: differently-shaped wooden meeples and tokens for the workers and resources, player counters with little hammer-and-sickles printed on them, and beautiful painted artwork on the board, too. Altogether, Red Outpost is a really fun game with great theming, and I definitely recommend at least giving it a try if you get the chance.