BATTLE FOR WESNOTH: Free, open-source, turn-based hex fun. Sort of like Fire Emblem crossed with Advance Wars crossed with, um, Tactics II. Comes with a number of (varying-quality) single-player campaigns, has multiplayer capabilities of some sort (haven't experimented yet), and you can doubtless download loads more stuff from the Internet, because it is, my brother informs me, 'extensible.'

Basically: hire units, have them slaughter other chaps in a turn-based battlefield, try to control villages to get more cash, and, this is the delicious bit for me, promote units into different types of units as they get kills (this is the Fire Emblem bit; well, that and the fantasy setting). So nifty. There are something like six races, without getting stuff from the 'wobs; each of them have about fiveish non-hero units, each of which promote into one to three different types of higher-level units. And then those promote too, if you manage to stuff 'em full of enough XP. Units persist throughout campaigns, if you keep them alive... it's enough to bring tears to my eyes.
Oh! And each unit has its own name, in addition to a class. So that's nifty.
THE WORLD ENDS WITH YOU: The chaps who are anywhere near me have seen me playing this rather a lot lately. Short description: It's a JRPG.

Look. It's insanely deep and really awesome and there are no random encounters (the thing I hate most about JRPGs, sooner or later), difficulty is configurable on-the-fly, you can lower your HP intentionally to increase the drop rate of valuable items... I'm rambling again. But the essential point: there are various benefits for wirelessly interacting with online chaps, especially (though not exclusively) those playing TWEWY. So: for those who are elsewhere (yo, Devin!), you should probably buy it if any of that sounds interesting, because it's pretty rad. For those who are nearby: buy it buy it I want super secret awesome stuff
Hmm. That might've gone a little off-track.
P.S.: TWEWY has nothing to do with the newest blagoseries. I just liked the title; it means something rather different in the game, and there's no connection plotwise or themewise. It was, perhaps, a poor choice of a name; but so it is.
Anyway, these games are cool, this author approves. Two stars out of a possible one.
I thought JRPG's had random encounters, hence FF and Pokemon.
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