Everyday Banter

October 5, 2009

Mass Effect, Steam and DLC

Mass Effect! Some people love it, some people hate it. But overall, this is one of my favourite games.  I’m going to get to Steam and DLC for the game – but first I’d like to offer a bit of information about the game to those who haven’t played it.

First off, the story. If you’re into deep, immersive and well thought out plots, this game is for you. Here’s what we have:

Source

Mass Effect has a word count of around 400,000 words – somewhere in the area of 4-5 full novels. But, unlike a novel, we also have visual images and other ways to tell a story. Our word count would be even higher if we had to describe settings or characters, but we actually have art and graphics to do that for us. I think a better comparison to give the full scope of our game is to use movie scripts. In Mass Effect, every line of dialog has full voice over, and we have 20,000+ lines of dialog – roughly the equivalent of 20 movies. That seems like a lot – and it is – but it’s necessary to keep a player engaged in our game and story for the 20+ hour critical path.

The game would take forever to cover here, but in essence the game is an action RPG set in our galaxy, the Milky Way. Dialog offers a number of options when talking to a massive amount of NPCs in game – most of these options feature an “aggressive/violent”, “neutral” or “nice/do-gooder” reply. Talent trees also offer you the chance to put points into ‘Charm” and “Intimidate”, these all affect the game. Which missions you get, which planets you can visit and more.

The game has a huge amount of content besides this, but I won’t review the game here. I’ll let you see for yourself.

Garrus, left; Commander Shepard, center
Image via Wikipedia

In the year 2148, explorers on Mars discovered the remains of an ancient spacefaring civilization. In the decades that followed, these mysterious artifacts revealed startling new technologies, enabling travel to the furthest stars. The basis for this incredible technology was a force that controlled the very fabric of space and time.

They called it the greatest discovery in human history.

The civilizations of the galaxy call it… MASS EFFECT.

If you think it sounds interesting, take a look at the wiki page. I’ve not had a chance to read all of it yet, so watch out for possible spoilers.

Onto my main point though, DLC on the Steam version of the game. If you bought the Steam version of the game, this is for you. I had to read loads of posts regarding this yesterday, but no one gave an easy step to step guide. The instructions were spread over multiple threads and multiple posts – understandably because the DLC wasn’t working for a very long time on the Steam version of the game.

But here’s what I did to make Bring Down the Sky work on the Steam version:

(note that if you want to follow on-site instructions, click here)

(I actually had to do steps 1-3 on my mobile broadband because my net didn’t want to work on the laptop, but this shouldn’t affect the outcome at all.)

  1. Sign into your Bioware or EA account via either one of these links. Alternatively, sign up for a Bioware or EA account via one of these links. I personally signed up for the Bioware account.
  2. Log in.
  3. Now, register your CD key. You can find your CD key for the Steam version of the game by following this path: Steam\SteamApps\common\mass effect\Binaries\MassEffectConfig.exe. If you installed Steam to the default directory, you should be able to find the Steam at C:\Program Files\Steam. Don’t give out your CD key to anyone/anything over than the Bioware site and the installer.
  4. After registering your CD key, the CD key for Bring Down the Sky will be listed. Make sure to keep this page open, or save the key somewhere – you’ll need it on the installer. If you can’t see your CD key or have lost where to find it, it should be here
  5. Download the installer for Bring Down the Sky:
  6. Once this is downloaded, run the file to start the install.
  7. Enter your Bring Down the Sky CD key, the one you saved on step 4.
  8. Play!

Step 8 seems pretty simple, but it can be a pain in the ass. I actually got a ‘Mass Effect has stopped working’ error after the install. I simply closed Steam and re-opened it via ‘Run as Administrator’. You can also restart your PC or verify the files through Steam if that doesn’t work.

The PC version of Mass Effect features a diffe...
Image via Wikipedia

Hopefully this will help someone install the DLC with a little more ease. As for Pinnacle station, I haven’t tried installing it yet – I want to complete the play through I’m currently on. I’ll edit this post when I do though. If anyone has any info about that, feel free to comment.

Feedback welcomed.

I was also wondering what class people enjoyed the most? I’ve tried a few, but I always go back to my Biotic/Adept Bastion with the Assault Rifle unlockable. There’s nothing like putting a singularity in the middle of a room, or putting a Thresher Maw into stasis and meleeing it!

Update: Getting Pinnacle Station installed onto your steam version of Mass Effect is a cake walk compared to the Bring Down the Sky DLC. Just goto the EA store, buy and download Pinnacle Station and the installer will do the rest.

Pinnacle station is quite fun from what I tried. It has things like Survival mode and King of the hill, very entertaining… especially on Insanity mode!

September 7, 2009

Spotify Goes Mobile

Quicker than I ever thought it would get there, Spotify announced yesterday that they are hitting the Apple and iPhoneAndroid market.

As an avid music fan, this is really awesome.

Before now I didn’t bother with the iphone due to it not being able to hold all of my music – however, having spotify on your mobile is literally like having millions of tracks in your pocket.

Even half a year ago in March, Spotify had 2,582,501 tracks available. Doing a search now (this is done by searching for ‘”year:0-9999″ without quotes  (thanks Brett) – If you’re reading this in the year 10k, I don’t know what to tell you) pulls up these results:

Tracks: (4,401,049)
Albums: (396,229)
Artists: (328,578)

One thing that I did have on my mind when reading the announcement was what type of mobile broadband the iPhone has. Is it even called that on the iPhone? Wifi and 3G I suppose. Will streaming use up a lot of bandwidth? Downloading a single file on my current phone is like taking my bank account around the back of the house and putting it out of it’s misery. My guess is that if you plan on using this app, you’ll want a contract that permits a lot of free data browsing or something which has a fixed price. I bold this so no one can complain that they tried it and had to end up selling their house to pay the bill.

Something else to be taken into consideration is Spotify Premium. To use the service on your mobile phone you’re going to have to pay £9.99 a month or £119.88 for a year for premium, this is purely for using it on a mobile – the service is still free on a computer.

For fun I tried to work out the price of a Spotify track if you were to pay the Premium price (thanks to Brett again ’cause I suck at maths); Spotify comes out at 0.000002 pence per month per track vs iTunes at 99 pence for track that you will own (this seems the most common price, I couldn’t find an average). We were going to figure out price per track listened to in an average lifetime… but we’ll leave that for later. It works out that Spotify becomes the cheapest once you listen to about 5000 tracks though (if you like to count payment towards the songs you listen to instead of the millions you might not).

Quality wise, Spotify has the upper hand with 320kbps. Needless to say, if you do buy premium it will also apply when using your account on a computer. Before this app was released, Premium was quite expensive for what you got in return (although what they’re giving away for free is a huge incentive to support them anyway).

However, here are the advantages as they look now:

  • Exclusives
    Exclusive access to pre-releases and concert ticket lotteries.
  • No ads
  • Travel access
    Go anywhere in the world and listen to your favourite music.
  • Mobile music
    Use Spotify on your iPhone or Android device.
  • Higher sound quality
    Stream music in a higher bitrate, up to 320kbps.

Here’s some of the features you’ll find on Spotify Mobile:

  • Stream over WiFi or 3G
  • Offline playlists
    Play music even without a connection, for example when riding the underground or on a plane.
  • Access your Spotify account
    All your playlists will be made available.
  • On-the-fly sync
    Add a track to a playlist and see it appear immediately on your computer and vice versa

A quick look at the app in action:

With all the focus on the iPhone, I actually haven’t mentioned the Android much. I’m pretty ill informed about both of the phones, to be honest. After reading articles about both, I still haven’t haven’t figured out which one would be better for me. With this new app though, I think I might be buying one. The problem is, dear reader, I haven’t a clue which. Input appreciated!

Would you like to know more? (points for knowing reference)

http://www.spotify.com/en/mobile/overview/

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