Games

3 Safety Tips for Online Gamers

Online gaming can be a lot of fun and relieving. It is also a brilliant way to make friends around and world and compete with them in a most fun-loving way. However, you should understand that the ‘online’ factor is not free from risks. There can be different types of harassment, dangers, and cyber bullying and online predators who can bring different threats to you if you do not implement the safety measures. 

The risk increases because you generally make virtual friends whom you have never met in person. If you are avid gamer, you may be aware of this fact. However, novice players may not have the idea. Read the articles to know how to be safe while playing online games. 

  • Avoid Exposing Your True Identity 

You need to protect your true identity from the virtual world. When you are creating an account in any online gaming site, make sure to keep it anonymous. You should also not post your real picture with the account. Your real name or picture will help the predators identify you easily. 

  • Avoid Revealing Any Personal Information

Avoid posting any personal information like age, gender or birth of date in every online gaming site. Phone number, addresses should also not be posted. This will be easier for the cyber bullying team to target you. 

  • Block the Suspect

If you find it uncomfortable to play with a particular player or find anything suspicious, you can always block the player. If you face any type of abuse, you can immediately report the profile as well. Make sure to inform your friend and ask them to report the profile so that no one else suffers the same harassment in future. 

These are three prime safety tips that you need to undertake whenever you play online games and make sure no harassment or bullying is encountered by you.

Games

How to Make an Effective PvP Team in Guild Wars

Say you’re there, with 3 other people in Team Arena, you are totally un-sure about the team, you have a Ranger Spiker, Touch Ranger, some Warrior/Mesmer and yourself. It looks like you’re in for a good game.

A few minutes in the game, the Warrior/Mesmer has died, the Ranger Spiker is way out of maps range and the Touch Ranger just ran out of energy. We’re all pretty screwed. The opposition’s Dervish and Assassin are eating us up, spitting up out, trod on and eaten again by wild beasts. You were absolutely hopeless.

But then you come across this guide! The very guide for you to use so that you can make an effective team on Guild Wars! This guide will only tell you how to make an effective team and how to use them.

First of all, all teams need a healer. Of course, you can’t just slap in a Healing Breeze and an Orison of Healing and toss in the attractive looking Healing Words. You need a proper monk, one that can effectively look after your team. But look, I’m no monk, I am useless, you need to have skills and timing and all sorts of things. A monk needs to protect the team with some good spells, make sure they don’t just scatter around the spot so you’re desperately looking for someone to heal. Monks CONTROL the group. Slap in a Word of Healing, Protective Spirit, Shielding Hands and possibly your Healing Breeze, and you’ve got something happening.

Then there are your main attackers. Of course, you can have a team of 1 attack and 3 healers, but you WON’T get anywhere, the opposition can’t kill anything because they have 3 healers that will only do a bit of damage, plus the main attacker, which will probably hit a 100 every now and then to win in casino online Indonesia for the betting odds which is quiet interesting as well. But then you have no hope for killing them, because they have three healers, they’ll be healing their butts off. So to effectively put up a good attacker, you need attack skills. Something to start off and then a finishing move. A starter can be one that will hit a lot with a long recharge, but then when they’re about to die, use your final hit which MUST hit at least 100. Unless you can pull it off some other way. You can pull this off by inflicting deep wound which normally gets them down to less than 100 healths if they’re almost dead. But really, any Fire Elementalist can EASILY finish off any one with about 170 healths no problem.

Then you MIGHT want a capper or a protector (this is not recommended). A protector might normally be an Earth Elementalist or a Monk. Monks are preferred because they have a healing bonus if they put up the Divine Favour attribute. An earth Elementalist is very uncommon because an Elementalists main job is to finish and to worry the opponents with their high damage.

Games

Mass Effect 2

2183 A.D. The first Mass Effect game takes players on a varied and engaging voyage across the galaxy, in an effort to stop a colossal menace, along the way having to combat rogue agents, robot zombies, unseen antagonists, with the option of genocide, messianic options, and everything in between as a resolution.

Two years later, both in-universe and in reality, Mass Effect 2 launches to much praise. Upon picking it up, a few things stuck out as improvements over the original. A few unique games of similar gameplay have also been released on DominoQQ and are really enjoyed by the players. 

First, the camera. While it seems like a paltry thing, a good camera system can make or break a game. Resident Evil 4, considered by some to be the best in the series, was revitalized largely by the new perspective. Mass Effect 2 does nothing so dramatic, but the camera feels more cinematic, swinging more fluidly and focusing to keep a crisp view on the action.

Second, the player animations. Bioware still has some flaws to work out with their character modeling system (Miranda’s model, for instance, sits firmly in the Uncanny Valley), the general animations are much improved. Running through fire, Shepard will raise his hands to cover his face. In the cold of space, he’ll shiver. Characters wince away from nearby bullet impacts, or scuttle behind cover in different ways to minimize the amount of their bodies that’s exposed.

After those first two things jumped to the fore, I continued to play. The story is largely the same in premise, Shepard is the only person who stands between humanity and extinction. This is not a bad thing. A well written script (coupled with Martin Sheen’s outstanding performance as the antagonist-turned-wary-friend Illusive Man) turn a hackneyed plot into a space epic, with characters showing genuine concern, guilt, and fear over their fates.

The game does a good job of keeping the pace of the story moving. There wasn’t a point where I felt that the story should have been condensed to stop it from being slow. Another improvement over the original is the change to the inventory and leveling system. Fewer skills mean less to spend points on, and as such there are fewer levels. From 60 being the maximum in the original, 20 seems to be the highest one can expect to be during the first run. The inventory system is greatly reduced, and there’s no longer any agonized lingering over what items to keep, and what to change into space goop.

With a higher focus on action, Mass Effect 2 manages to defeat an obstacle many action games have had trouble tackling without stumbling: Quicktime events. Normally, a game will present a quicktime event as an easy (or not so easy) ‘press x to not die’ sequence. Mass Effect 2’s are treated differently, with a right or left mouse click corresponding to a paragon or renegade action (hero or anti-hero, respectively).

All this praise, however, doesn’t mean Bioware’s new game is without flaw. The justification for Commander Shepard’s scarring is lackluster at best, and wall-bangingly frustrating at the worst.

On the topic of Commander Shepard, the male voice actor was still a lump of coal in the pile of diamonds that is the rest of the talent pool for Mass Effect 2. It can be forgiven, though, in that it’s hard to record dialogue in a multitude of different tones and inflections, responding to the same event, and still seem genuine.

The last major flaw I saw was the final battle. After a suitably monumental struggle through the antagonist base, numerous (optional) character deaths, Shepard and crew are confronted with an enemy that seems like it would have been more in line with a Terminator fan fiction story than the until-then largely untarnished story of Mass Effect.

But even with the flaws, Mass Effect 2 suffers from none of the decay and dreariness that tends to hang around sequels of large games like smog. With an improved weapons and inventory system, a wider cast of characters, and a more streamlined world, and a very interactive, possibly heart-wrenching ending, Mass Effect 2 trumps the original, standing on the shoulders of the predecessor and reaching new heights for the action game genre. Between Mass Effect 2 and Dragon Age: Origins, Bioware has firmly secured itself a place in video game history as innovators, inventors, and taleweavers of epic proportions, crafting wonderful game after wonderful game. Mass Effect 2 absolutely lives up to the standard set by other games- and surpasses them.