
September came in hot as heck and is leaving also pretty hot. I’m sure we’ll start cooling off soon. Hopefully. My hoodies are calling me from the depths of the closet so I certainly hope so, anyway. As I sit with a nice breeze and campfire smoke on the air let’s go over my September gaming, which — sort of weird for me — only consisted of mainly two games: Lord of the Rings Online and No Man’s Sky. LotRO pulling me in with their new piratey quest chain and No Man’s Sky with their 11th Expedition. Sadly both, in my opinion, ended up a little underwhelming. Not bad, per se, just a little less than I was expecting.
September’s Goals Rating: Not Bad, I Guess
Some of the goals I had for September were putting my wishes out into the universe to hold me accountable, so that I didn’t meet those I’m not surprised. But that’s okay as they weren’t that bad. Let’s check them out.
- Complete No Man’s Sky‘s Expedition 11 – Complete!
- Check out Star Trek Online‘s Incursion (and complete missed story) – Nope, wanted to, but just wasn’t feeling it.
- Check out LotRO‘s Tale of the Shipwrecked Mariner – Complete!
- Build the New PC (2nd Time on Goals) – Nada, but I think my hesitancy is stemming from too much risk, so I need to address that first.
- More Fallout: New Vegas – Nope. Also, just wasn’t feeling it.
- Get out 4 posts; Get on a weekly blog posting schedule – 25% complete! Hey, 1 is better than 0, right?
- Avoid dire sickness, unlike last year – Complete! We got sick, of course, but far from dire.
3 out of 7? Decent batting average, but far from stellar. I blame the Expedition but I’ll get into that. But hey, we only ended up under heavy sickness for only 3 or 4 days, the back-to-school crud mainly making us feel run down and crappy all month, but still able to function. A HUGE improvement over last year.
Lord of the Rings Online: Milling in a pre-Mariner Multiverse

As I type this recap of September, the Mariner, LotRO‘s newest class is officially live and players are able to start swashbuckling their way across Middle-Earth. Which is awesome. The new class sounds like a lot of fun but I’m the type of MMO player that splits up all my characters among multiple games, so rarely do I create more than one character per game.
My reasoning is that until I see all the story a game has to offer re-rolling new characters in the middle of that only delays how long it takes to see all that content. Of course when I reach the top my inclination is instead of restarting the game to see how other classes play I just play a different game. It’s not a hard rule, mind you, like lately trying out ESO‘s Arcanist until level 10 to unlock rewards, or having multiple Star Trek Online characters to play through their Recruitment Events and different faction-specific stories. But still, one character is usually enough for me.

Anyway, for Talk-Like-A-Pirate Day Lord of the Rings Online this year launched a set of eleven missions titled Stowaway: The Old Man on the Shore with the reward of a full sailor-themed outfit, which is quite excellent. The storyline followed the tale of this old man as he recounts his life, his trials and tribulations with a nemesis sailor and achieving vengeance and was a decent story to play through.
However, I thought the missions themselves felt a little bare. The maps were basically a generic tavern, a generic port city, generic ruins, generic cave, and a generic bad-guy encampment. All with sets of mobs wandering around, just waiting for players to beat up on. Not bad, really, but with their next expansion Corsairs of Umbar not too far away and this content being released featuring sailors and pirates, I was expecting this to be a little more of a preview of what is to come and it just didn’t hit that mark. Ah well.
It did get me back into playing LotRO for a time, though, so it totally succeeded in that regard. My main, a Dwarf Runekeeper finished up everything in the winter-cursed zone of Wildermore and started good progress into Western Rohan. I finished up the zone of Kingstead, fully leveled up my warsteed, and started in on Eastfold. Also, been experimenting with the new Landscape Difficulty slider, currently set at +3 Fearless, but I’ll give my varied thoughts on that in another post. Hopefully.
No Man’s Sky: Expedition 11, or Starfield-Lite

The other half of the month I spent in No Man’s Sky in their 11th Expedition. Expeditions, as I have mentioned before, are generally one of the best launching off points for new players and usually act as a tour through the game’s newest content. For veteran players who have learned the ins and outs these usually only take a handful of nights to complete. This one, however, took me 8 nights, and was all over the place that I can’t in good faith suggest it.
It was focused primarily on “exploration”, which in this case meant landing on random hot/acidic/whatever planets and scanning everything around until you finally come across one creature good enough for the missions to complete. This took way longer than I feel it should have and maybe was used to help bolster a player’s nanite reserve — as, you see, scanning every creature on a planet’s surface gives the player a sizable nanite boost — but the tedium of landing and scanning, landing, scanning, landing, scanning, was just too much. As for the phases, milestones generally completable in order following a guided path, I ended up finishing the 1st phase, then the 5th last phase, then the 4th, the 2nd, and finishing up with the 3rd phase. Totally out of order, but that was the easiest path to take.
I can only guess this Expedition was released simply to compete with Starfield. Which, to me, seems silly. Starfield is the latest Bethesda game that’s been in development for years and, by most accounts I’ve read, plays exactly like a Bethesda game. A style that between Fallout and Elder Scrolls has fully cemented itself in gamers brains so much that it’s essentially a money-printer now. Trying to compete with that feels like throwing rocks at a mountain. Totally unnecessary. No Man’s Sky and Starfield are two totally different products with their only real similarity being spaceships and planets. They’re completely different otherwise.

Oh, except for the bugs. This Expedition was riddled with bad bugs, just like Starfield, including one bug where, until it was hot-fixed, stopped most players from even finishing the Expedition! So it, just like LotRO‘s new Stowaway story, felt totally rushed. The rewards leave a lot to be desired, too, the best of which being an electric backpack trail and a simple tent — a base addition that does allow you to get out of the elements without needing to build a full structure, which is nice, but not thrilling. Both of these combined, along with the bugs, leave me no choice but to not suggest playing this Expedition. I have yet to add it to my Expedition ranking, but when I do it’ll be very low down the list.
The worst part is they added a whole bunch of great things with the Echoes update! Including a new race, new Pirate reputation, huge capital ship battles, new story, and a staff multi-tool. All excellent additions to the game that the Expedition doesn’t touch at all! The reasoning being, I guess, is that the new content is mostly found after the main story’s end. Which also feels unnecessary. So I spent the rest of my time in No Man’s Sky checking out all the new stuff. But why have this race, with a full language, only available after the conclusion of the main storyline when the rest of the game is all relatively non-linear? Even the new story didn’t feel entirely like a justification for it. Just a weird miss-step. They could’ve waited a few weeks, polished it up, maybe added some of the new elements, when players are now getting a little tired of Starfield, and they probably would’ve been better off. But that’s just my armchair thinking. Who knows what they were really thinking.
Gaming Goals for October
So, all in all a little disappointing. Except, that is, for making good headway into a new-to-me LotRO expansion. So what do I hope to complete in this, the spookiest month of October? Here are my goals.
- Complete the 1st Part of Division 2‘s Year 5 Season 2 Update and Hit SHD level 250
- Check out LotRO‘s Harvestmath
- Check out GW2‘s Shadow of the Mad King
- Check out ESO‘s Witch’s Festival
- Order a few more parts for the new PC and put it all together (3rd time’s the charm?)
- Get out 3 blog posts (One less than last goal?)
- Prep for a Return to Streaming on Twitch
All of these feel totally doable as I know I will be checking out all the Halloween offerings in the games I usually play, but this year (hopefully) without all the sickness and vacation prepping as last year. Here’s hoping a safe and spooky month for all!
// Ocho















































