My PC (April 16th, 2013 - May 21st, 2015)
These are the specs of the PC I started using on April 16th, 2013.
| CPU | Intel Core i7 3770 |
| Motherboard | Asus P8P67 Pro REV 3.0 |
| Memory | Corsair Vengeance 16GB DDR3 1600MHz |
| Video Card | EVGA GeForce GTX 660 |
| Storage | Western Digital 2TB Black HDD, Samsung 840 Pro 128 GB SSD |
| Optical Drive | Asus DRW-24B1ST |
| Case | Fractal Design R3 |
| Power Supply | Corsair CMPSU-850HX 850 Watt |
| Operating System | Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM) |
My PC (March 22nd, 2013 - April 16th, 2013)
These are the specs of the PC I used from March 22nd, 2013 to April 16th, 2013.
| CPU | Intel Core i5 2500K |
| Motherboard | Asus P8P67 Pro REV 3.0 |
| Memory | Corsair Vengeance 16GB DDR3 1600MHz |
| Video Card | EVGA GeForce GTX 660 |
| Storage | Western Digital 2TB Black HDD, Samsung 840 Pro 128 GB SSD |
| Optical Drive | Asus DRW-24B1ST |
| Case | Fractal Design R3 |
| Power Supply | Corsair CMPSU-850HX 850 Watt |
| Operating System | Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM) |
My PC (March 13th, 2013 - March 22nd, 2013)
These are the specs of the PC I used from March 13th, 2013 to March 22nd, 2013.
| CPU | Intel Core i5 2500K |
| Motherboard | Asus P8P67 Pro REV 3.0 |
| Memory | Corsair Vengeance 16GB DDR3 1600MHz |
| Video Card | EVGA GeForce GTX 660 |
| Storage | Western Digital 2TB Black |
| Optical Drive | Asus DRW-24B1ST |
| Case | Fractal Design R3 |
| Power Supply | Corsair CMPSU-850HX 850 Watt |
| Operating System | Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM) |
My PC (February 15th, 2013 - March 13th, 2013)
These are the specs of the PC I used from February 15th, 2013 to March 13th, 2013.
| CPU | Intel Core i5 2500K |
| Motherboard | Asus P8P67 Pro REV 3.0 |
| Memory | Corsair XMS3 8GB DDR3 1333MHz |
| Video Card | EVGA GeForce GTX 660 |
| Storage | Western Digital 2TB Black |
| Optical Drive | Asus DRW-24B1ST |
| Case | Fractal Design R3 |
| Power Supply | Corsair CMPSU-850HX 850 Watt |
| Operating System | Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM) |
Sleeping Dogs Livestream: The SWAT Pack
This is my playthrough of The SWAT Pack downloadable content for Sleeping Dogs on the PC. I bought the DLC for $0.99 during a 75% off sale that Steam was having.
The SWAT Pack gives you a SWAT uniform that lets you withstand twice as much damage along with a SWAT van you use to activate 20 "Cop Jobs". Cop Jobs are short side missions that involve shootouts, chasing down and disabling vehicles, and sniping hostage-takers. If you love Sleeping Dogs as I do and just want something more to do in that world, I recommend checking this DLC out. It took me about an hour and a half to do it all, though a chunk of that time was spent having to redo missions due to glitches or having to escape the cops because I can't resist blowing up my vehicle after jumping out of it. I would say it takes less than an hour to get through all the missions.
This footage is taken from a livestream I did over on Twitch.tv.
Look how funny I am
Sleeping Dogs: Martial Arts Pack - My Playthrough
This is my playthrough of the Martial Arts Pack downloadable content for Sleeping Dogs on the PC. I bought the DLC for $0.74 during a 75% off sale that Steam was having.
The Martial Arts Pack comes with a Wing Chun dummy in your apartment that you can interact with (Jackie Chan fans should recognize it); the Shaolin Warrior outfit, which gives you increased melee damage; and the Shaolin Showdown mission that lets you fight monks whenever you please. I wouldn't recommend the DLC unless it becomes super cheap again and you want a quick way to fight a bunch of tougher-than-average dudes for an indefinite period of time. I stopped after killing 70 of them.
Please excuse my poor combat performance; it had been a while since I last played the game!
My PC (June 2011 - February 15th, 2013)
These are the specs of the PC I built (my first time ever doing that) back in June 2011 and have been using since.
| CPU | Intel Core i5 2500K |
| Motherboard | Asus P8P67 Pro REV 3.0 |
| Memory | Corsair XMS3 8GB DDR3 1333MHz |
| Video Card | Asus GeForce GTX 570 |
| Storage | Western Digital 2TB Black |
| Optical Drive | Asus DRW-24B1ST |
| Case | Fractal Design R3 |
| Power Supply | Corsair CMPSU-850HX 850 Watt |
| Operating System | Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit (OEM) |
Storyteller
I originally wrote this post a few months ago and am just now getting around to posting it up.
My brother and I got the "Storyteller" trophy in Batman: Arkham City this Labor Day, along with everyone else who got the game before Halloween 2011 and didn't cheat by setting their clocks ahead. Not that I have anything against people who do that (that would be crazy), but it's not something I do. I found it more fun to set reminders on Google Calendar for every major holiday of each month and play the game then. It also gave me an excuse to boot up Arkham City every once in a while.
The Storyteller trophy/achievement is where you, Batman, have to go into the bottom floor of the courthouse and speak with Calendar Man on specific holidays, resulting in him describing a crime he committed on that holiday in the past. The game uses the internal clock of whatever system you're playing on, so if you play the game on Christmas (or tell your system that it's Christmas by setting the clock manually instead of through the internet), Calendar Man will tell you a story about a crime he committed on Christmas. It's a cool Easter egg that gets you some good, violent stories and a trophy/achievement.
Arkham City isn't the first game to use a console's clock to trigger special events like this, but it's one of the best uses I've seen. I know that Animal Crossing does this to a much larger extent, too.
Did anyone else bother getting this achievement? Did you do it in real-time or did you change the clock? What other cool uses of this mechanic have you seen?



