The sun has set, it’s time to go on a prowl in the Imperial City. I’ve already joined the Thieves Guild and now I just need some stolen goods to sell to Ongar in Burma before the guild will give me any special job. First off, I have a quest with Jensine to investigate Thorinir and his suspicious contact who seems to get Thorinir goods below market costs.
Archive for July, 2010
Oblivion Days 1 – The Bloated Float
After a tiring escape from the Imperial Prison and sewers, I needed a good rest. I worked my way to the Waterfront district and was told that the Bloated Float would be a nice place to eat and get some rest.
Some oblivion screenshots
I found some old oblivion screenshots I took back in 2006 on my 6600GT 128MB. It was my first video card I bought. Before the 6600GT I had a Riva TNT2 32MB.
On the way to reclaim his house
As a Medic, I will abandon you
I just recently broke 100 hours with medic in Team Fortress 2, officially my most played class. Total, I have around 400 hours put into TF2 over the past 3 years. From the start I never really wanted to play medic, but I did want to win games. You’re not going to be breaking any sentry farms with unubered heavies/soldiers/demos so a medic is needed. It seems so odd right? That a class I didn’t want to play is also my most played class. Why would I keep playing medic if I didn’t want to play it?
Life as a medic is harsh
One of the reasons I didn’t like playing medic is that you have to take the passenger seat in killing and doing objectives. Your goal in the game is to keep your team alive and support them in the push towards the objective. Sure you’ll be top of the scoreboard with assists and healing but you won’t be getting the satisfaction of a kill. The second reason I don’t like playing medic is that you are the bullseyes that everyone wants to kill. Getting close to an uber? Count on a crit rocket or a spy coming around your way. As other classes if I get killed, I don’t mind but with medic, it’s often when I’m past 75% in an uber charge that just got wasted and now I have to build it back up again. It’s just one of those laws of life where you count on something bad happening to you as you near the climax of joy.
Try surviving this without an Uber
What I found to make playing medic a much more enjoyable class for me to play is to be an offensive, or as other people call it, battle medic. If I see a large chance of myself being killed and I don’t have faith in the person I’m supporting to protect me, I’ll break off the healing beam and go for the kill with my saw. If I survive, my ubersaw gets a nice charge bonus, if I die, I would have died anyways so it’s better to die while trying than to die with the medigun pointed at the enemy. Other times, I just can’t resist the lure of an easy kill as there’s something satisfying about getting the drop on enemies and humiliating them with a kill.
Your medic is mine!
I don’t know if by being a battle medic I cause more harm to my team by dying instead of staying back and safe, but I do know it’s a lot more fun to run around causing distractions as the enemy try to hunt down an almost harmless medic. Lately though I’ve been moving away from medic. If I see there’s other good medics on the team, I’ll just stick to medic for the initial push out of the gates until I die. Sometimes however, we end up winning the round without me dying at all even with battle medic attacks on the enemy frontline.
The next time you play with me and I’m your medic, remember, if I see an easy kill, I’ll take it, even if I have to kill steal from you. If you’re the enemy, don’t think I’ll stick around with my medigun out waiting for you to kill me, I’ll go down trying to take you with me.
Moments later, we discover an all medic team only gets you to the second point
By the way, I use to prefer playing pyro back in the days, now there’s too many pyros running around not doing a good job of supporting the team so I decided to give heavy a try.
Burn baby burn



