When I first heard about
Left 4 Dead I didn't think it'd be a game for me. Zombie survival? Please! I want to shoot Nazis and aliens!
1 I'm the guy who loved all of the "realistic" missions in
Return to Castle Wolfenstein but turned on "God mode" as soon as the lightning-launching Frankensteinien horrors showed up. Sure, I've played plenty of
Half-Life in my day, but those things shambling toward Gordon Freeman aren't zombies, they're alien-infested humans that act a heck of a lot like zombies. That distinction makes a big difference, right?
Enter
Left 4 Dead. Sure, I'd heard about it on
The Video Game Show, but I only listen to that podcast because I work with one of the hosts; I don't actually care about their opinions!
2 But then P.G. Holyfiend started hinting (subtle fellow he is) that the Olde Fartz try a little zombie survival some Thursday night. Hey, we might like it! I gently rebuffed P.G., because
Left 4 Dead is one of them new-fangled games (with graphics and everything!) and the whole point of Olde Fartz is to provide an opportunity for those of us who can't afford a new gaming rig every six months to get together on a regular basis and play some of those not-so-new-and-shiny games we love (like
WarCraft III and
Neverwinter Nights).
Never mind that I rebuilt my PC last summer and it kinda-sorta meets the requirements to play some of these new-fangled games.
The final nail in the coffin was driven by our own Overlord Miller,
3 who—out of what passes for some sick, twisted facsimile of "kindness" that lives in the sick, twisted flesh-pump that passes for his "heart"—gave me a copy of the game on Steam.
4 And so it came to pass that on Saturday night I was drawn into the world of zombie survival with Overlord Miller and Air Commandant Moore, and we—along with an array of projectile weapons and no small number of improvised explosives—battled our way through a shambling (and often not-so-shambling) horde of the restless undead.
And we did the same Sunday night; at least until Miller said something about having to get up for work in about as many hours as there are fingers on one of his hands.
5 Our merry band...well,
disbanded, but I'd not had enough of the zombie-killin', so I played through the first mission in the single-player campaign, which turned out to be nearly another two hours and
no, we don't need to discuss what time I went to bed last night that will be quite enough out of
you, say please and thank you.
Now, to be honest, the game runs a bit slow on my PC, probably owing to my on-board video adapter. At least, I
hope my video adapter is to blame, because the first thing I did after we finished playing Saturday night was get on NewEgg.com and order a new GeForce 9400 GT w/1 GigaBoogle of RAM. Hey! It was on sale! Don't you judge me!
At any rate, the game I envisioned when people talked about it and the game I wound up playing are pretty much two different beasts. The latter is much, much better. Which means that other people
suck at describing awesome things. Heck, I probably do, too. It's a fun game. Not for the kids. There are gallons upon gallons of blood and the language is pretty rough, so if that's not your bag you probably want to avoid
Left 4 Dead.
But if that
is your bag, you may be able to find us on Steam, and we may need a fourth gun some evening, and we'd love to have you. Because, quite frankly, I am sick to death of being consistently one-upped by an AI player. Honestly, it needs to stop.
We've got a group on Steam:
The Secret Lair. If you've got a Steam account, join us. Even if you don't have
Left 4 Dead, 'cause we might play something else. There's always a chance. It could happen.
1 Notable exception: Arcade shooters. Especially
House of the Dead. It's different when my involvement in the game is limited strictly to shooting stuff with a big gun and the whole "moving around" business is conveniently handled by the game.
2 Joke. It's a good show, really. I only bought
Titan Quest because they raved about it. Ditto for
Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion.
3 He has a special hammer just for driving final nails into coffins, you know.
4 When the man wants to be entertained, he
will be entertained. Money is no object.
5 Hint: less than six.