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dot frank

Beaten Games – 2023

I think 2023 may have had even slower gaming output from me than 2022 or any other previous year. Don’t get me wrong, there were plenty of titles out this year; this current generation looks to finally be hitting its stride. I am trying more and more to play games that have actual endings rather than open ended gameplay. And for the open ended games, I have been trying to avoid getting distracted with every side mission. I had a lot of fun with Cyberpunk 2077 though which made it hard right out the gate and I think I put something like 50 hours into Horizon: Forbidden West.

I was able to get some good online time in with friends and the games that I did play I enjoyed and got plenty of hours out of. Looking at my list, no real clunkers for me this year. The outlook for next year is bright with Super Mario Wonder ready to be started on 1/1/24. Have a great year everyone who reads this!

January 2023

Cyberpunk 2077 (PS5) – 1/6/23
Toem (PS5) – 1/9/23

March 2023

Minecraft Dungeons (PS4) – 3/16/23
Huntdown (PC) – 3/21/23

April 2023

Gorn (PSVR) – 4/2/23
Horizon: Forbidden West (PS5) – 4/4/23
Creed: Rise To Glory (PSVR) – 4/22/23
Superliminal (PC) – 4/29/23

June 2023

Spider-Man: Miles Morales (PS5) – 6/8/23
Trek To Yomi (PS5) – 6/25/23
TMNT: Shredder’s Revenge (PS5) – 6/30/23

July 2023

Halo 2 – Halo MCC (PC) – 7/2/23
The Case of the Golden Idol (Mac) – 7/15/23
Call of Duty: Cold War (PS5) – 7/16/23

August 2023

It Takes Two (PS5) – 8/29/23

September 2023

Mortal Kombat 1 (PS5) – 9/19/23
Dave the Diver (PC/Mac) – 9/20/23

October 2023

Lake (PS5) – 10/7/23

December 2023

We Love Katamari Reroll (PS5) – 12/21/23
Prodeus (PS5) – 12/31/23


2023 Gaming Superlatives

As I mention in my disclaimer every year, these games may not have come out this year but they definitely got on my radar and occupied most of my time this year.

Best Game – Playstation 5: Mortal Kombat 1 – I am a simple man. A new Mortal Kombat comes out and I buy it. Outside of those weird single player spin-offs they made in the early 00’s and Mortal Kombat 4, I have usually been getting Mortal Kombat’s within the release window. I really enjoyed MK 11, it’s storyline, and expanding pop culture roster crossover so the “franchise reboot” that MK 1 brought was a no brainer. Hell, I even got the steelbook for the physical disc this time around. They see me from a mile away.

Single player storyline is again top notch for fans of Mortal Kombat lore, tons of great references and appearances. It’s funny to see how in depth the game has gotten since being a Street Fighter knockoff in the early 90’s. While there are promises for more single player storyline, the Incursion mode keeps things going single player with a series of challenges and characters from what seems to be a procedurally generated universe. A lot of great mashups of characters.

Runner Up: PGA 2K23 – I play golf, but not well. I play video game golf too, but not well as well (see what I did there). Thankfully I have a few good friends in real life who may be better than me at real golf, but the playing field is evened out online. Since the game came out free on Playstation Plus earlier this year, we have gotten at least two to three rounds in online a month as a group. It’s great to play with headsets, watch each others horrible shots and talk shit along the way. The button press control scheme works great for me compared to using the stick hit and there are plenty of great built in and user created courses. It’s just like real golf, but a whole less embarrassing for me when it comes to the actual golf work.

Best Game – Switch: Wrestling Empire – I barely touched my Switch this year until I bought Wrestling Empire late in the year and I put in close to 30 hours with it and I have absolutely nothing to show for it.

When you first see Wrestling Empire, it looks like something crudely put together when compared to the big budget professional wrestling games from WWF and AEW. This works to the games advantage because it seems to attact a much less toxic wrestling fanbase. The look and feel is a throwback to some of the greatest wrestling games ever made: WCW/NWO Revenge, WWF Wrestlemania 2000, WWF No Mercy. Once you get into the gameplay, customization, and roster, you realize there is a whole lot more going on. No one element of the game works perfectly which makes the whole end product so interesting. On to of this, the whole thing being made by one person is an amazing feat. I am looking to try the developer’s other Switch game, Old School, at some point this year too.

Runner Up: Samba De Amigo – I remember the first time I saw Samba De Amigo many many years ago. It was being played on a Dreamcast and featured 1st party Maraca controllers. This was before Guitar Hero and a whole bunch of other rhythm games. Shaking the Maracas to Reel Big Fish’s “Take On Me” or the Macarena was an amazing experience for someone who hated Dance Dance Revolution.

There was a horrible Nintendo Wii port during the console’s shovelware peak and then the game disappeared. Fast forward to earlier this year when the game was announced, and then delayed months and finally came out in August. I was there day one for it and… Well the memory of the original Samba De Amigo still stays the strongest but this is a definite second place. The JoyCons aren’t the most accurate with rhythm detection and I can only pass some levels using the gamepad mode, but it is still a great trip down memory lane. I just wished I held off a few months and got it at $19.

Best Game – Mac / PC: Dave the Diver – I don’t care if they want to classify it as an indie game or not. Dave the Diver was some of the most fun I had gaming this year. I put in a little under 40 hours in the game split between my Mac and PC. Everything synced perfectly through Steam Cloud. There is an addicting gameplay loop that keeps expanding as each day progresses. From just deep sea fishing to running a sushi bar to farming to treasure hunting to a mysterious civilization, Dave the Diver was a lot of fun and even having beat the main story and a lot of side quests, there is no hint of things slowing down.

Runner Up: The Case of the Golden Idol – As I mention later on, I love point and click adventure games on the computer. The Case of the Golden Idol scratched an itch that I haven’t had for a long time. It is one of the most well crafted Point and Click mystery solvers that I have played.

Every scene is a mystery and while it starts off easy, by your third or fourth intertwined case, you will be physically writing down clues on a note pad to call back to. Sometimes the story itself has a little too much lure and I need to refer to previous cases, but it was never overwhelmingly impossible. There is also a built in help system which was no help to me the few times I tried it. Over the course of the year, two expansions were released, but I haven’t touched them yet. I need something in early 2024 to keep me entertained before the sequel comes out.

Best Game – Mobile: ScummVM – This was a last minute addition and nice surprise. The team behind the excellent ScummVM system have released a legitimate version on the App Store for iOS and iPad OS. For the uninitiated, ScummVM is an “interpreter” for the scripting languages for a bunch of classic adventure games from LucasArts, Sierra, and many others letting you play them on modern computers and portable systems. For me, the Space Quest and Leisure Suit Larry series are two of the biggest influences in gaming for me alongside Maniac Mansion and Sam and Max on the LucasArts side.

Previously to use ScummVM on iOS, you needed to download the source and compile, sign, and load it onto your device. For people like me who don’t do development but can follow directions, it’s a whole painful process. They have finally been able to appease the Apple App Store gods and be legitimately listed. I have downloaded it and installed my copies of Space Quest IV and Freddy Pharkas: Frontier Pharmacist and will be testing in the new year. but today’s under the wire release is my favorite gaming news on mobile because those old point and click games on an iPad go hand in hand.

Solitaire Stats Update: Well I started posting the stats of my most active game, MobiltyWare Solitaire+ on Apple Arcade, last year and figured I can show my progression since I haven’t added much else to the page.

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dot frank

Beaten Games – 2022

A slow year in gaming overall as publishers and developers are still adjusting to the post-pandemic world. With lockdowns and working from home over for me, I got a lot less gaming in personally. Along with that, there just weren’t that many titles out that pulled me in. This year I really tried hard to play more games with actual endings other than open world loops. A couple of those titles snuck through the cracks though (looking at you Cyberpunk 2077 and Vampire Survivors). Still some real bangers this year, but I’ll add at the bottom.

January 2022

Deathloop (PS5) – 1/6/22
Sackboy Big Adventure (PS5) – 1/15/22

February

Doom Eternal (PC) – 2/16/22

March

Far Cry 6 (PS5) – 3/6/22 – Main Campaign
Shadow Warrior 3 (PS4) – 3/15/22
Song of Iron (PC) – 3/23/22

April

Road 96 (PC) – 4/4/22
Spongebob Squarepants: Battle For Bikini Bottom – Rehydrated (PS4) – 4/14/22

May

Spider-Man (PS5) – 5/6/22
Super Mario Bros U Deluxe (Switch) – 5/25/22

June

Hardspace: Shipbreaker (PC) – 6/19/22

July

Stray (PS5) – 7/24/22

October

Paper Mario: The Origami King (Switch) – 10/28/22

December

God of War: Ragnarok (PS5) – 12/7/22
WarioWare: Get It Together (Switch) – 12/16/22


2022 Gaming Superlatives

Not all of these games may have come out this year, but they are the ones that consumed most of my time.

Best Game РPS5: God of War Ragnar̦k РOne of the few games I bought on launch day and even preordered in 2022. Well worth the wait and a huge improvement and refinement over God of War (2018). Another great overall story and a lot of variety on the enemies this time instead of just palette swaps. The ending was kind of blah, but after The Last of Us series, most game endings are.

Runner Up: Cyberpunk 2077 – I’ve had the game roughly since launch and never touched it. I got the PS4 version as a gift, and after the initial reviews started coming out, I figured I would never play it. With the PS5 version released as a free upgrade this year, I decided to jump in. Let me say this is one of the best looking current generation console titles out there right now and a great story too. Don’t get me mistaken though, a lot of the missions and stories just seem to fizz or go nowhere which probably comes from the rushed development. My main beef is a control one though: no matter how much time I spent tweaking the controls, the right stick look and aim just never felt right. Still I am playing this at the end of 2022 and should hopefully have the main story done early in 2023.

Best Game – Mac / PC: Hardspace:Shipbreaker – I first played the game at PAX East 2020, about a month before the lockdown. A few months later it was released to early access. I got a good 15 hours in under early access before I put it away to wait for the shipping 1.0 release. That came this past May and I jumped into the story and all the additional ships added. Plenty of variety for this spaceship scrapyard simulator. It’s the job I never knew I wanted if I wound up in space and in debt.

Runner Up: Vampire Survivors – I got this game in Early Access just because of the hype alone and I couldn’t figure it out. I would last 10-15 in game minutes tops before I got wiped out. Then I actually read up on it and learned about the weapon evolution system and in no time I became a screen clearing killing machine.

Best Game – Switch: Paper Mario: The Origami King – The Mario games that aren’t side scrolling or 3d platformers are sometimes the best. The Origami King is funnier than it should be for a Mario game. A lot of real world and Mario/Nintendo universe visual and written jokes. The attack system is simple enough for my mind except for the puzzles that made me think way too many steps ahead.

Runner Up: WarioWare: Get It Together – I love a good WarioWare game. You can just put every old game on a cartridge and I would still buy it. Thankfully this has some new gameplay ideas and microgames to play. Finished the main story and now here I am going for all the unlocks.

Best Game – Mobile: Easy Come, Easy Golf – Clap Hanz made my favorite arcade style arcade game as of recent, Everybody’s Golf, for PS4. Easy Come, Easy Golf is their mobile entry and it was initially an Apple Arcade exclusive (now on Switch too). It’s a great evolution of the elements of Everybody’s Golf and the Hot Shots Golf series before it. I am still a bigger fan of the console versions, but this even plays on Apple TV well.

Runner Up: Solitaire+ – I am addicted to single card draw Klondike. It is the biggest time killer for me. The Apple Arcade version is the best version of iOS solitaire. No ads, nags, micro-transactions. I can just mindlessly stack cards.

Here’s to playing a couple more good games (and a lot more Solitaire) in 2023!

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dot frank

a couple fall foliage shots

A couple shots of some New Jersey fall foliage. I have been using my last couple sets of photos to get familiar with darktable. I am moving RAW photo management software after not getting any updates in years from my current one, AfterShot Pro.

I am still not fully used to darktable yet. To be honest I don’t like their management system for adding to the library. Either that or I just haven’t figured it out yet. I am trying to avoid any subscription based photo library management software for my separate RAW files. Apple Photos handles all my jpg / heic images and video fine.

I’d say I’ll have more posts soon, but to be honest the next time you may hear from me is my yearly beaten games list. But never say never.

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dot frank

Beaten Games – 2021

Another year in the books, another list of the games I beat over the past 365 days. Some people listen to music, others watch TV, a few brave souls in this day and age go to the movies. I play way too many games for my health and age. And in order for me to feel any sense of accomplishment, I have to post a list of the ones I beat to the **checks notes** 8 viewers a month to this site (with most of them here for the Nirvana Boxed Set post for some reason). So without further ado…

January 2021

Destroy All Humans (PS4) 1-7-21
Shadow of the Tomb Raider (PS4) 1-31-21

February 2021

Tearaway: Unfolded (PS4) 2-6-21
Loco Roco Remastered (PS4) 2-11-21
Little Nightmares (PS4) 2-18-21

March 2021

Maneater (PS4) 3-7-21
Injustice 2 (PS4) 3-22-21

April 2021

South Park: The Fractured But Whole – 2nd Full Playthrough – Platinum trophy (PS4) 4-3-21
Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze (Switch) 4-11-21
Pistol Whip – Story Mode 1 (PSVR) 4-12-21
Concrete Genie (PS4) 4-21-21

May 2021

Streets of Rage 4 (PS4) 5-18-21

June 2021

Nex Machina – Rookie (PS4) 6-3-21
Uncharted: The Lost Legacy (PS4) 6-17-21
Super Mario World (SNES via Super NT) 6-20-21
Wattam (PS4) 6-27-21

July 2021

Mario Golf: Super Rush (Switch) 7-10-21

August 2021

The Outer Worlds (PS4) 8-18-21

September 2021

Judgement (PS4) 9-18-21
Blood and Truth (PSVR) 9-27-21
Astro’s Playroom (PS5) 9-29-21

October 2021

Ratchet and Clank: A Rift Apart (PS5) 10-26-21
Operation Tango – Platnium (PS5) 10-29-21

December 2021

Wario Ware (GBA) 12-23-21

2021 brought with it large scale distribution of the COVID vaccine (part 1) which resulted initially in a demand on the level of the current generation game systems. Once vaccinated and able to take advantage of the outside world with a much, much, much lesser risk of it resulting in being thrown in a hospital or dying definitely affected how many games I went through this year versus 2020.

After just about a year from the original release, I was able to get a PS5. If I didn’t know long it would take for me to get another chance to get one, I would have waited. Outside of Ratchet and Clank, I haven’t seen a game that has impressed me as much. I am playing through Deathloop currently and it is a great game, but not seeing anything that couldn’t have been done on PS4. I am looking forward to being impressed more in 2022 with the next Horizon and God of War games.

The Superlatives

Game of the Year 2021NONE – There is no game that came out in 2021 that I played that truly stood out to me. I am playing some good 2021 games now with Deathloop, Hades, Far Cry 6 and some others, but it is 2022 now and I will be beating those games this year. It’s a transition year as the new PS5 and Xbox systems are barely out there and development seems split between exclusive titles that take advantage of the new systems and crossover games between two generations until everyone can get their grubby mitts on a new system. I did borrow and beat Ratchet and Clank: A Rift Apart which not only looks like a CGI movie but plays great too. If I were to give a game of the year award away, it would be for this one. But I just don’t have much more to write about it.

Multiplayer Game of the Year 2021Operation Tango – I beat this start to finish with my friend Will and it was a great experience. Reminded me of the Portal games where you have to communicate with the other player over headset to finish any of the missions within the larger assignments. Plus with each character having their own missions, playing through it twice was a necessity. A great PS Plus freebie game.

Honorable MentionsManeater was the best open world (open sea) game I played this year. Judgement was a great experience which is expected after the fun I had with the Yakuza games I’ve played. I don’t think I could play them every day though so I try to limit it to one a year. Mario Golf: Super Rush is just great arcade golf and it got some great courses added to it after release. Hopefully some more too.

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dot frank

DNG Support for DJI Mini 2 in Corel AfterShot Pro 3

I’ve made a few posts in the past about how much I like my DJI Mini 2. I was never a master photographer, but the tools they provide make it fun to learn. While the jury is still out on if there is any real benefit to using the DNG format vs JPG with my model and camera, I wanted to see any differences with my own two eyes.

This post isn’t about any comparisons between the two formats. It’s more about viewing the DNG files in my current photo editor of choice, AfterShot Pro 3 from… Corel.

Yes, I understand it is no longer the mid to late 90’s so the name Corel doesn’t have as much sway in the creative world as it used to, but this is the lengths I will go to avoid using an Adobe product. AfterShot Pro, for an amateur digital photographer, isn’t that horrible. It has all of the features I have needed for my attempts at digital photography when working in other raw formats like CR2 for my Canon. Plus it is a pay once and own license and not a subscription.

Although I think with the lack of updates the product has had the past couple years, it is safe to say, on its final legs.

Anyway, the main problem I am having is that the DNG files written out by the Mini 2 are not read at all by AfterShot Pro 3. They are getting scanned, as the AfterShot Log shows, and no errors are coming up. But something is stopping them from actually appearing in the browser as Exhibit A here shows:

The folder in Finder shows the DNG’s but AfterShot Pro 3, draws a blank

So I decided to see if there was something I could do to fix support. The main idea of what I did, was originally documented by someone else here on GitHub for enabling support for another camera type when you know that the compressed format is the same. Because of this, I think this fix will work for a number of different DJI drone cameras that may currently not show up in AfterShot Pro 3. When originally searching for an answer to this problem, I did come across a few forum posts complaining about the lack of support.

The first step was I installed the only DJI camera plugin that was listed for me inside AfterShot Pro 3. It is for the Inspire 1, but that doesn’t really matter for what we are doing. Download, install it, and then quit out of AfterShot.

  1. The first step was I installed the only DJI camera plugin that was listed for me inside AfterShot Pro 3. It is for the Inspire 1, but that doesn’t really matter for what we are doing. Download, install it, and then quit out of AfterShot.

2. Next you will want to navigate to your Camera Plugins folder for AfterShot Pro 3. This is wherever you have designated your User Folder within AfterShot. After installing the plugin from 1, you should see a folder called dji_inspire_1.afcamera. Duplicate that folder and rename the duplicate to dji_mini2_1.afcamera. I am sure you can name it whatever you want too. In your plain text editor of choice, open the Info.afpxml inside the mini2 folder.

3. Before editing the Info.afpxml text, open one of your DJI created .DNG files in your EXIF previewing tool of choice. For me, it is plain old Preview.app in macOS. You are going to need to get the camera model number from the EXIF tags. In preview for me it was available in two different panels. The DNG panel and the TIFF panel both listed the model number.

4. With that model number (FC7303), I can go into the text editor and replace all the other references to previous (FC350 in the case of the Inspire 1 preset) with the model of my drone, and then save out all of the changes. It should only be two times. I am sure the other fields can provide useful information too when filled out, I just have no clue what to put in them.

5. Once you have saved out the Info.afpxml, you should be able to launch into AfterShot Pro 3 and go to a folder of DJI drone shot DNG files and view them to your heart’s content. This also applies when sending photos to HDR Merge and other features.

If you have a DJI Mini 2 drone and don’t want to do any of these steps, you can download the plugin I made to use in this post. Unzip and put it in your Camera (64-bit) folder in your AfterShot Pro user folder. No support provided, not responsible for anything NOT working. 😅

Folder and AfterShot Pro 3 browser are both showing DNGs. We are good to go. 👍

And as a bonus here is an overexposed foliage shot that I processed with DNG inside AfterShot Pro 3.