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Succubus Hunter

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May 19, 2020
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Us uneducated plebs be watching the Australian Open...
You: :oops: (watches a professional chess tournament at least one of the aforementioned plebs had to google)

Well fuck, now I feel stupid for watching pretty girls in skirts smack a ball with a racquet at 180 km/h (ideally the same force with which they'd spank me... :LOL:) - thanks a lot for ruining my guilty pleasure/femdom lite fantasy aseratrix!



If he'd have a public profile and I were in your place, I'd troll him with a pm in which I'd thank him for the reaction score just to trigger him further! He's facepalmed a few of my posts too in the past, but not even nearly this many - I guess one could say he has a "bullish" determination, which coincidentally is also a very fitting epithet for describing this person's maturity and intellect... :LOL:

Fyi for anyone interested, Give or take and Giant Guardians have also recently gotten an update. I know I've been kinda inactive for the past week, but I do try to still keep an eye on things! :)
Oh my... I never thought how well tennis skills could translate to spanking. Just imagine how intense someone like Serena Williams could his if she smacked your ass like a tennis ball <3

I will never see Tennis the same way again.
 
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LAKueiJin

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Apr 15, 2020
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Oh my... I never thought how well tennis skills could translate to spanking. Just imagine how intense someone like Serena Williams could his if she smacked your ass like a tennis ball <3

I will never see Tennis the same way again.
I'm personally more into Anett Kontaveit, Paula Badosa or Danielle Collins currently and, if we're talking former no. 1s/top players, I liked Sharapova, Caroline Wozniacki, Ana Ivanovic and Li Na quite a bit too, but yes, I suppose Serena would be the best in terms of raw power...

Also, pro tip: Women's volleyball is even hotter! :sneaky:
 
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Aseratrix

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I'm personally more into Anett Kontaveit, Paula Badosa or Danielle Collins currently and, if we're talking former no. 1s/top players, I liked Sharapova, Caroline Wozniacki, Ana Ivanovic and Li Na quite a bit too, but yes, I suppose Serena would be the best in terms of raw power...

Also, pro tip: Women's volleyball is even hotter! :sneaky:
I myself am partial to artistic skating, fencing and water-polo :giggle:
 

Aseratrix

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Same here, at least in the adult realm, outside of it I've finally finished Shadow of the Tomb Raider and started playing God of War since it's now avaiable on PC.
My graphics card is quite weak, so my ability to play very graphically demanding games is limited. I do began to play Mafia 2 again [and the Mafia 1 remaster - which I had to abandon because there is a scene where I had to shoot the turret of a chasing armored car, which I failed to do even on easy difficulty with 50+ tries]. I highly anticipate Knights of Honor 2. And if my pc could bear it, I would certainly play Mount and Blade Bannerlord. I also saw a game called ARK, a huge survival game which I would also try. But overall, even non-adult games are a bit of a let-down for me as of late. It just boggles my mind how despite the advancement in computing tech, games have gotten dumber and dumber with time. Lets just take a genre I am not particularly fond of: racing. I claim that NFS Porsche from 2000! was the most realistic physics-wise, and since then every such game is an arcade shit. RTS: nothing could repeat the lore and gameplay sweetness of Age of Empires and Starcraft. Isometric RPGs: nothing after Diablo 2 came around even close to that masterpiece. And so forth...It seems like mainstream games have gotten dumber just like mainstream movies, mainstream music, everything I swear!
 
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Innocience

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Mar 25, 2020
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Agreed; not many hard femdom releases these past weeks.

On the whole games getting worse thing: I find that having fun or enjoying oneself with a game is as much a mental thing "I want to have fun" as it is a game thing.
Especially when it comes to porn games on this site. What I expect and want of a game at a particular time has huge implications on my personal enjoyment; i.e. is this just for a quick fap or do I want to immerse myself into the setting.
I find it's sometimes better to just step away for a bit until your mind is back in a state in which it wants to experience and play a game rather than just fill time.

claim that NFS Porsche from 2000! was the most realistic physics-wise
Are you trolling on purpose or have you never played any racing simulator?
 

Aseratrix

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Are you trolling on purpose or have you never played any racing simulator?
Probably never played any racing simulator then. I was referring to NFS games mainly, and of those I will stand my ground that Porsche was the best physics-wise [and not only, I particularly loved the evolution game mode it had, there was even a dedicated fan-base for online play up until 2018 in iplounge 18 years after its publication!]. Name an enjoyable, realistic racing simulator.
 
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Innocience

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Probably never played any racing simulator then. I was referring to NFS games mainly, and of those I will stand my ground that Porsche was the best physics-wise. Name an enjoyable, realistic racing simulator.
It's an iffy argument to make. NFS was more sim oriented in its very early years but has since gone (Hot Pursuit 2 onwards) the full arcade route (with a few exceptions, e.g. Shift) and has never since had an identity (The Hot Pursuit remake was basically Burnout just under a different name).

Enjoyable (pure) racing sims are hard to recommend. First you absolutetly need the periphery to go with that (steering wheel minimum, pedals probably too) and you have to know if "realistic racing" and physics is even something you want. Most people don't (see GTA IV vs. GTA V car physics for a mainstream example).
Then you have to figure out what sort of racing excites you the most. Most classic sim fans love GT3 and GT4 racing; Rallye is more enjoyable to others and Drift is its own thing.

As for games: iRacing's often in the top of many but requires a subscription and you basically need to pay for everything with quality (cars and tracks). Less expensive, game-complete sims like Asseto Corsa, Project Cars (1 or 2) and games like DIRT also have their fans and are probably more interesting if you only want to dip your feet into sims.
If you don't feel confident sim racing is for you I can recommend BeamNG; it's more a realistic driving physics sandbox. So if that sort of driving isn't what you're after you can at least watch the beautiful car crashes.

If you only want to dabble a bit more from the arcade into the sim racing direction there's always Forza Horizon and Gran Turismo. Those also have the benefit that a controller is enough.
 

Aseratrix

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It's an iffy argument to make. NFS was more sim oriented in its very early years but has since gone (Hot Pursuit 2 onwards) the full arcade route (with a few exceptions, e.g. Shift).

Enjoyable (pure) racing sims are hard to recommend. First you absolutetly need the periphery to go with that (steering wheel minimum, pedals probably too) and you have to know if "realistic racing" and physics is even something you want. Most people don't (see GTA IV vs. GTA V car physics for a mainstream example).
Then you have to figure out what sort of racing excites you the most. Most classic sim fans love GT3 and GT4 racing; Rallye is more enjoyable to others and Drift is its own thing.

As for games: iRacing's often in the top of many but requires a subscription and you basically need to pay for everything with quality (cars and tracks). Less expensive, game-complete sims like Asseto Corsa, Project Cars (1 or 2) and games like DIRT also have their fans and are probably more interesting if you only want to dip your feet into sims.
If you don't feel confident sim racing is for you I can recommend BeamNG; it's more a realistic driving physics sandbox. So if that sort of driving isn't what you're after you can at least watch the beautiful car crashes.

If you only want to dabble a bit more from the arcade into the sim racing direction there's always Forza Horizon and Gran Turismo. Those also have the benefit that a controller is enough.
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Anonymous100

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Dominant Witches released an update for patreons a couple of days ago but it gets updated for public 2 weeks after the patreon release. Other than that, pretty uneventful week for femdom game lovers in this part of the site
 
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Mister_M

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Apr 2, 2018
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My graphics card is quite weak, so my ability to play very graphically demanding games is limited. I do began to play Mafia 2 again [and the Mafia 1 remaster - which I had to abandon because there is a scene where I had to shoot the turret of a chasing armored car, which I failed to do even on easy difficulty with 50+ tries]. I highly anticipate Knights of Honor 2. And if my pc could bear it, I would certainly play Mount and Blade Bannerlord. I also saw a game called ARK, a huge survival game which I would also try. But overall, even non-adult games are a bit of a let-down for me as of late. It just boggles my mind how despite the advancement in computing tech, games have gotten dumber and dumber with time. Lets just take a genre I am not particularly fond of: racing. I claim that NFS Porsche from 2000! was the most realistic physics-wise, and since then every such game is an arcade shit. RTS: nothing could repeat the lore and gameplay sweetness of Age of Empires and Starcraft. Isometric RPGs: nothing after Diablo 2 came around even close to that masterpiece. And so forth...It seems like mainstream games have gotten dumber just like mainstream movies, mainstream music, everything I swear!
Honestly I think we live in a golden (or almost) golden age of video games. For me Diablo was less classic RPG but more hack'n slash game with RPG mechanics, but if you're looking for interesting RPGs with isometric POV (smth I personally hate btw) you can play Divinity: Original Sin 2 (which is by many considered the best isometric RPG ever), Pillars of Eternity games, Torment: Tides of Numenera or - if you want smth more original and focused on story - Disco Elysium (really good game imo). There's a ton of action RPG games too (but not with isometric view) like God of War (more focused on action), Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, Demon's Souls remake, Bloodborne, Hades (this one's isometric) or games like Ghosts of Tsushima, Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice, NioH games and so on. BTW slightly older action game that I'd recommend is Spec Ops: The Line.

I'm not a big fan of racing games, but Porsche 2000 was my 1st NFS game that I didn't like when it came out. But in general I prefer more arcade approach to racing games, and even then I just don't like them that much.

I do play FPS games sometimes. I really like DooM and DooM Eternal, played some FarCry games, though they got really formulaic and repetitive (the same with Assassin's Creed games). You can try Deathloop, which is quite interesting game too. The are some interesting fighting games out there too. And GTA games are really fun to me, IV and V especially. I never got into Mafia or Saint's Row, but with somewhat similar approach I like Sleeping Dogs and L.A. Noire.

But there's smth to choose from basically every genre, great amount of indie devs, a lot of adventure/"walking sims" that I rather enjoy. While games by the likes of Ubisoft, Electronic Arts are indeed dumbed down, repetitive and often dedicated to make money on microtransactions there's still a lot of stuff to choose from (though we'll see how Microsoft's last steps will influence the gaming industry, could be for worse). Currently I'm waiting to try Dustborn, Forspoken, Starfield, new Stalker game, Season, new Star Trek and The Expanse games, Broken Pieces and more. I'm also thinking about trying Chorus and Elex II and I'll check out Uncharted when it'll be avaiable on PC and there's remaster of Life is Strange coming out this year too and I want to finally play this games too.
 
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Aseratrix

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Honestly I think we live in a golden (or almost) golden age of video games. For me Diablo was less classic RPG but more hack'n slash game with RPG mechanics, but if you're looking for interesting RPGs with isometric POV (smth I personally hate btw) you can play Divinity: Original Sin 2 (which is by many considered the best isometric RPG ever), Pillars of Eternity games, Torment: Tides of Numenera or - if you want smth more original and focused on story - Disco Elysium (really good game imo). There's a ton of action RPG games too (but not with isometric view) like God of War (more focused on action), Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, Demon's Souls remake, Bloodborne, Hades (this one's isometric) or games like Ghosts of Tsushima, Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice, NioH games and so on. BTW slightly older action game that I'd recommend is Spec Ops: The Line.

I'm not a big fan of racing games, but Porsche 2000 was my 1st NFS game that I didn't like when it came out. But in general I prefer more arcade approach to racing games, and even then I just don't like them that much.

I do play FPS games sometimes. I really like DooM and DooM Eternal, played some FarCry games, though they got really formulaic and repetitive (the same with Assassin's Creed games). You can try Deathloop, which is quite interesting game too. The are some interesting fighting games out there too. And GTA games are really fun to me, IV and V especially. I never got into Mafia or Saint's Row, but with somewhat similar approach I like Sleeping Dogs and L.A. Noire.

But there's smth to choose from basically every genre, great amount of indie devs, a lot of adventure/"walking sims" that I rather enjoy. While games by the likes of Ubisoft, Electronic Arts are indeed dumbed down, repetitive and often dedicated to make money on microtransactions there's still a lot of stuff to choose from (though we'll see how Microsoft's last steps will influence the gaming industry, could be for worse). Currently I'm waiting to try Dustborn, Forspoken, Starfield, new Stalker game, Season, new Star Trek and The Expanse games, Broken Pieces and more. I'm also thinking about trying Chorus and Elex II and I'll check out Uncharted when it'll be avaiable on PC and there's remaster of Life is Strange coming out this year too and I want to finally play this games too.
Golden age...well, I can't see that. But good for you! [for me the golden age was somewhere around the release of Oblivion] Regarding isometric RPGs, I forgot Grim Dawn, which was very good, but its also already an old game. The ones you mentioned each have something I dislike.
I will now say it for the third time: I am not big on racing games, I probably merely have fond memories of Porsche, and it had the best physics of any similar games I tried before or after. The cars had WEIGHT and it impacted driving, as well as you almost "felt" their suspension, etc. I can't really put a finger on it.

I was never a big FPS fan. I was more of an RTS one. Never played FarCry and the new Doom games, somehow watching their gameplay videos and reviews left me really cold. Same with GTA. The latter always stroke me as too trashy for my taste [again based on videos I watched about their gameplay] while in comparison the Mafia games [1 and 2] was a nice story-driven alternative as far as I can tell.
I do look somewhat forward to Starfield, because I ususally liked all Bethesda games [the pc modding community made them all more than playable], but the rest are unknown to me. There are some games I look forward to playing like KoH2, Bannerlord, some other strategy and city building games too, but not too many others really. Ever since the "always online", "micro-transactions" and action-focus took over in most games, the decline of RTS gaming, etc. I find myself returning to old titles more often than not. I'd rather play Minecraft even, compared to the console-like cartoony "adventure" games I see most people excited about.

I remember there was a Chinese kung fu mmo game I loved in the mmo era, as well as a Korean fantasy one. MMOs are however dead since then.

If this is the golden age, then I guess I can finally say I'm not a gamer! :LOL: What a relief!
 
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TessSadist

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Divinity: Original Sin 2 (which is by many considered the best isometric RPG ever)
Looking for a specific game in here and caught this...I am not much of a gamer but I promised to play with my boyfriend two specific games with him and this is one of them. We are doing co-op. He said I would really enjoy playing one of the female characters, so I am trusting him, lol! I'm really impressed so far with the multiple paths to try and get out of this island prison place. I tried another character playing style a while back with more speed fighting with him, but didn't like it compared to a style of taking turns. Kind of like a strategy game too a little. But I bet we take half a year to finish it with not a lot of time to play it. :(
 

Mister_M

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Apr 2, 2018
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Golden age...well, I can't see that. But good for you! [for me the golden age was somewhere around the release of Oblivion] Regarding isometric RPGs, I forgot Grim Dawn, which was very good, but its also already an old game. The ones you mentioned each have something I dislike.
I will now say it for the third time: I am not big on racing games, I probably merely have fond memories of Porsche, and it had the best physics of any similar games I tried before or after. The cars had WEIGHT and it impacted driving, as well as you almost "felt" their suspension, etc. I can't really put a finger on it.

I was never a big FPS fan. I was more of an RTS one. Never played FarCry and the new Doom games, somehow watching their gameplay videos and reviews left me really cold. Same with GTA. The latter always stroke me as too trashy for my taste [again based on videos I watched about their gameplay] while in comparison the Mafia games [1 and 2] was a nice story-driven alternative as far as I can tell.
I do look somewhat forward to Starfield, because I ususally liked all Bethesda games [the pc modding community made them all more than playable], but the rest are unknown to me. There are some games I look forward to playing like KoH2, Bannerlord, some other strategy and city building games too, but not too many others really. Ever since the "always online", "micro-transactions" and action-focus took over in most games, the decline of RTS gaming, etc. I find myself returning to old titles more often than not. I'd rather play Minecraft even, compared to the console-like cartoony "adventure" games I see most people excited about.

I remember there was a Chinese kung fu mmo game I loved in the mmo era, as well as a Korean fantasy one. MMOs are however dead since then.

If this is the golden age, then I guess I can finally say I'm not a gamer! :LOL: What a relief!
You may be 1st person I spoke to that didn't like (at least a little bit) Disco Elysium :O

I too think that watching someone else playing DooM Eternal is not a great experience, but once you're in a game it offers intense and suprisingly varied gameplay (you have to constantly switch weapons and use additional "abilities" [chainsaw, grenades, glory kills, flamethrower] in order to survive waves of enemies, each with its own set of weak points) that swallows me and puts me "in the zone". Personally I was never a big fan of Elder Scrolls games, I finished main quests and did some side ones, but I grew bored after some time. I definitely had more fun playing RPGs like The Witcher 2-3, GreedFall, The Outer Worlds, Dragon Age 2-3 (though cause of rather simple fighting mechanic it also started to bore me at some point) or more action oriented Mass Effect and Deus Ex games. BTW from games I want to play this year Steelrising by the devs of GreedFall. That being said I'm a big fan of adventure games and logical ones and I can't wait until we'll finally get more info about the sequel to Talos Principle.

Looking for a specific game in here and caught this...I am not much of a gamer but I promised to play with my boyfriend two specific games with him and this is one of them. We are doing co-op. He said I would really enjoy playing one of the female characters, so I am trusting him, lol! I'm really impressed so far with the multiple paths to try and get out of this island prison place. I tried another character playing style a while back with more speed fighting with him, but didn't like it compared to a style of taking turns. Kind of like a strategy game too a little. But I bet we take half a year to finish it with not a lot of time to play it. :(
TBH I tried playing the game 3 times and while I like the setting and the freedom the game gives me I just can't feel "my" characters through isometric POV, it just leaves me empty. The only isometric games that I enjoyed are Sanitarium and Disco Elysium (and maybe Postal :) ), cause they are more story oriented and are more adventure games (esp. Sanitarium). I also don't like games where I have to control group of characters (in RPGs I like to be "me" and only "me"), so I prefer the approach of games like Dragon Age, The Outer Worlds or Mass Effect where I can order around my teammates but they are controlled by AI. But for co-op I think Divinity is a very good choice. And as someone who spent a lot of childhood playing Heroes of Might & Magic III I rather tend to enjoy turn-based combat (I guess that's why I play chess).
 
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Aseratrix

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You may be 1st person I spoke to that didn't like (at least a little bit) Disco Elysium :O

I too think that watching someone else playing DooM Eternal is not a great experience, but once you're in a game it offers intense and suprisingly varied gameplay (you have to constantly switch weapons and use additional "abilities" [chainsaw, grenades, glory kills, flamethrower] in order to survive waves of enemies, each with its own set of weak points) that swallows me and puts me "in the zone". Personally I was never a big fan of Elder Scrolls games, I finished main quests and did some side ones, but I grew bored after some time. I definitely had more fun playing RPGs like The Witcher 2-3, GreedFall, The Outer Worlds, Dragon Age 2-3 (though cause of rather simple fighting mechanic it also started to bore me at some point) or more action oriented Mass Effect and Deus Ex games. BTW from games I want to play this year Steelrising by the devs of GreedFall. That being said I'm a big fan of adventure games and logical ones and I can't wait until we'll finally get more info about the sequel to Talos Principle.


TBH I tried playing the game 3 times and while I like the setting and the freedom the game gives me I just can't feel "my" characters through isometric POV, it just leaves me empty. The only isometric games that I enjoyed are Sanitarium and Disco Elysium (and maybe Postal :) ), cause they are more story oriented and are more adventure games (esp. Sanitarium). I also don't like games where I have to control group of characters (in RPGs I like to be "me" and only "me"), so I prefer the approach of games like Dragon Age, The Outer Worlds or Mass Effect where I can order around my teammates but they are controlled by AI. But for co-op I think Divinity is a very good choice. And as someone who spent a lot of childhood playing Heroes of Might & Magic III I rather tend to enjoy turn-based combat (I guess that's why I play chess).
Heroes III, yeah, that was in the golden age...wtf is Disco Elysium?? lol
 
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Mister_M

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Apr 2, 2018
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Heroes III, yeah, that was in the golden age...wtf is Disco Elysium?? lol
Disco Elysium is a non-traditional role-playing game featuring no combat. Instead, events are resolved through skill checks and dialog trees via a system of 24 skills that represent different aspects of the protagonist, such as his perception and pain threshold. In addition, a system called the Thought Cabinet represents his other ideologies and personality traits, with players having the ability to freely support or suppress them.

The game takes place in a large city still recovering from a war decades prior to the game's start, with players taking the role of an amnesiac detective who has been tasked with solving a murder mystery. During the investigation, he comes to recall events about his own past as well as current forces trying to affect the city.

Disco Elysium was written and designed by Estonian novelist Robert Kurvitz. It features a distinctive oil painting art style, and music by the band Sea Power.
 
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