Every week or so, for the last year, my friends and I have all braved the harsh English weather and dragged our collective assess to one lonely little house in the middle of nowhere (about 10 mins walk away). At this house, with the curtains drawn and the lights off, the 6 of us sit down and play games such as Rome: Total War, Star Wars: Battlefront and Midtown Madness. Face to face.
Amid accusations of "Screen-Watching" and play fighting there's always a lot of swearing, shouting and spilling of drinks but all in the name of fun. These PCs are hardly what anyone would call powerful, some of them struggling to run Windows ME.
However, it is extremely refreshing to play games with someone that you can actually slap if they anger you, eliminating (nearly) all cheating and general faggotry that I see when I play online. I'm not saying that everyone cheats on the internet, but there are those out there that do, and it's not cool.
LAN Parties are fairly uncommon, apart from the odd Starcraft or CS:S Tournament with online gaming taking the throne of Multiplayer.
Your question, should you choose to accept it, is given the choice (and the resources), which is your preffered method of multiplay?
Amid accusations of "Screen-Watching" and play fighting there's always a lot of swearing, shouting and spilling of drinks but all in the name of fun. These PCs are hardly what anyone would call powerful, some of them struggling to run Windows ME.
However, it is extremely refreshing to play games with someone that you can actually slap if they anger you, eliminating (nearly) all cheating and general faggotry that I see when I play online. I'm not saying that everyone cheats on the internet, but there are those out there that do, and it's not cool.
LAN Parties are fairly uncommon, apart from the odd Starcraft or CS:S Tournament with online gaming taking the throne of Multiplayer.
Your question, should you choose to accept it, is given the choice (and the resources), which is your preffered method of multiplay?