darkchewie
Member
I tried playing Airship Dragoon the other day (thanks Sub Zero!), and after seeing that the tutorial was a few buttons directing you to ~10 pages of text, I knew this was going to be a bumpy ride.
I started up an easy vs CPU game and it took about 45 minutes to an hour just to figure out the UI and controls. Limited to 12 guys, you get to choose your soldiers (kind of like in Total War) and what each can carry in their inventory, limited by a maximum weight point system. Equipping different items in the inventory took me 5-10 minutes alone and many funky eyebrows. Barely comfortable with how the game works, I started moving my soldiers (all of whom are wearing different uniforms) across the huge map, getting stuck on bushes or magically climbing on top along the way. By the 3rd or 4th time moving all of my 12 guys, it alerted me (with a small counter in the menu) that I had spotted an a enemy target. At least I think that's what it meant. Unfortunately, without scrolling through each one individually, I don't think you can figure out which guys are yours because of the unique uniforms.
So of course, I ended up killing one of my soldiers whom I thought was the enemy, only learning of it when it was his turn to move. I closed the game after that, and will probably try again later.
I started up an easy vs CPU game and it took about 45 minutes to an hour just to figure out the UI and controls. Limited to 12 guys, you get to choose your soldiers (kind of like in Total War) and what each can carry in their inventory, limited by a maximum weight point system. Equipping different items in the inventory took me 5-10 minutes alone and many funky eyebrows. Barely comfortable with how the game works, I started moving my soldiers (all of whom are wearing different uniforms) across the huge map, getting stuck on bushes or magically climbing on top along the way. By the 3rd or 4th time moving all of my 12 guys, it alerted me (with a small counter in the menu) that I had spotted an a enemy target. At least I think that's what it meant. Unfortunately, without scrolling through each one individually, I don't think you can figure out which guys are yours because of the unique uniforms.
So of course, I ended up killing one of my soldiers whom I thought was the enemy, only learning of it when it was his turn to move. I closed the game after that, and will probably try again later.