Tagged: Afrika

The Relevant Tweets: Afrika (PS3)

The Relevant Tweets represents all my micro-blogging status updates pertaining to a single game or topic, collected at key moments and patched together here as a timeline. I usually do this when I’ve finished a game but seeing how Afrika is one of those long, slow burns and now that I’ve finished the main missions and will probably be spending less time with the game, I thought I’d throw this together.

Oct 16th – I’ve waited four years. Why am I so broken hearted to hear that Afrika continues to be out of reach?

Nov 5th – Everything about Afrika is slow. Takes 5 min. to load each time, saving games takes nearly as long. But it’s pleasant like Endless Ocean…

Nov 5th – Busy night in Afrika. Got mauled a few times. Got some good shots though. Just like real life only it’d be photos of toys/cats. Later!

Nov 6th – Oh Afrika. Why couldn’t you have made it out here 3 years ago when you would’ve looked good? Still enjoying it but man, is it clunky

Nov 8th – This is where I am right now. Where the heavens touch the earth!

Nov 16th – Back in Afrika for a bit. I’m a busy photographer. Still wish it weren’t so clunky though.

Dec 21st – @Victor_Lucas finished Batman: Arkham Asylum (finally!) and PixelJunk Shooter. Wrapped it up with some Afrika. Sucker for photo sim = me.

Dec 23rd – Oh Afrika. I could get so much more done if you didn’t take AGES to load AND save. Still fun, just a slow, slow, slow burn of a game.

Jan 3rd – Waiting for a vulture and a stork to land near each other AND in front of my camera. EPIC!!!

Jan 11th – Wow, I think I just finished Afrika. But I didn’t save so I can do “final” mission over again. And get better pics of the Barbary Lion!

Jan 13th – Finished Afrika. Still mysteriously incomplete trophies/assignments. No clue what to do but I hope it doesn’t require a 2nd playthrough!

Jan 18th – @NowGamer_Dan ha! I totally know what one is thanks toAfrika! I took many a pretend picture of a sleepy pangolin!

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Now Playing: Afrika (PS3)

One of my very first photos...

According to my in-game diary, I’ve spent just over 68 days in Afrika’s, err, Africa but in actuality it’s been much longer. As I’m sure you’re aware if you listen to our podcast, I’ve been playing Afrika since November when I gave up trying to find it in a store and bought it from Amazon. At first I was disappointed to realize it’s not much of an exploration or adventure game with only five moderately-sized, mostly flat areas filled with a slowly increasing array of virtual animals walking through their canned animations. Then, as I began unlocking new cameras and lenses, I finally realized that Afrika is more of a photography sim than anything else.

Switching to Manual Mode via the same interface you’ve probably seen on your own digital camera, every function of these increasingly expensive (and naturally Sony branded) DSLRs is at your fingertips. Shutter speed, aperture, exposure, even the Review Delay that keeps the last photo you snapped on-screen for a second can be fiddled with depending on just how hard you want the game to be. Even with 90% of the equipment unlocked I’m having a challenging enough time getting quality shots in Auto Mode which basically means Point ‘n Shoot. I adjust the exposure around sunset and I’ve ashamedly taken to using the “Vivid” visual effect because it amps up the contrast and colors without having to spend hours in Manual Mode.

As wide as the uncanny valley may be in Afrika with animals that really don’t do anything, I still find myself taking photos the same way I would in real life. Even having criss-crossed these five locales dozens of times I still stop and take photos that have nothing to do with an assignment. Stupid closeups, awkward vertical shots, lens flares. Those are my specialties and for the most part they come out looking just like photos I’ve taken at zoos we’ve been to. Most of these I delete once I get back to camp since the game can only hold 200 shots, but some of the ones I’ve saved have turned out to be the subject of new assignments. I get the e-mail request for a photo of a White Rhino and its baby and, bam, I turn right around and send a reply, See: Attachment!

Even outside of the rigid “Big Game” events, Afrika is a highly scripted experience but there’s just enough freedom and personal interpretation that it continues to drag me back again and again. It definitely feels like a grind after a few hours and I have to stop for a while (sometimes you really have to sit around and just wait for animals to show up), but three months in I’m still committed to seeing this through. I’ll stop here because not even I want to read 1,000 words about Afrika all at once. Look for another Field Report to be filed soon.

...and one of my latest!

E3: Natsume Takes PlayStation 3 and Wii Owners on a Photo Safari

Natsume, traditional publisher of all things farming with the evergreen Harvest Moon series, is branching out to a new kind of environment this year with two sun-drenched safari titles. Originally released in 2008 by Sony in Japan, Afrika on the PlayStation 3 has remained as elusive as a Liger on these shores but Natsume has finally wrangled in the rights and will be bringing the photorealistic photo safari to the U.S. this fall. I have personally been longing for this game for years; the idea of exploring the vast savannahs of Africa with nothing more than a camera sounds like a wonderful change of pace from the glut of gritty sci-fi shooters we’re currently trodding through.

Click through to NfamousGamers for more on Natsume’s Animal Kingdom: Wildlife Expedition for the Wii.