

It's a good game, and I think once the story mode is in, it might be a downright great game.

Need to keep moving and hope for the best. I probably didn't pack as much as I should've, and now my supplies are running low. The wealth of food on the coast kinda spoiled me.

During my last session I found an entrance to a mine, which I'm currently exploring. I slept in caves and fought off wolves at night. Haven't found anywhere nearly as cozy since, and now I kinda miss it.Īfter that I came to a place with a lot of burned down houses. This was the last place I stayed in on the coast, before moving on. And that's a problem, because, as I found out, if you hang out in a place for too long, the wolves start showing up. You'd still need to make occasional trips out for firewood of course. You could pretty much just live in one of these. They all have stoves, so you can stay warm, and holes for fishing in. Mended my clothes with scavenged materials.īut best of all were these ice fishing cabins. I read a couple books about surviving in the wild and ice fishing. Reached the coast! I'd been very nomadic up until this point, but here I slowed down a bit. Seems the game has bigger, open areas connected by these smaller linear sections.Ĭamping in a cave along the train tracks. This is from the second area, which is pretty, but extremely linear. Started off at Mystery Lake and had a wolf take a bite out of me on the second day, but after a bit off effective knife-flailing it ran away. I've currently survived for 9 days, traveled quite far, and found good warm clothing and tools, but no weapons. My first game ended with me stumbling around and freezing to death before my first in-game day had ended. Hint for (some) owners of the E-M5 Mark III re AF points Using your MC-20 Teleconverter with your OLY 60mm Macro lens The truth about the focus stacking feature of the EM-1 ii Macro Photography and the EM1 mark 2 / 60mm macro comboĭigitizing slides with Olympus 60mm macro and Olympus Capture
THE LONG DARK FORUMS ISO
HOW-TO: LiveND, 14 stops DR, ISO 25 RAW on any Olympus camera Photographing Hummingbirds Feeding From Flowers: Setup and Camera Settings.
THE LONG DARK FORUMS MANUAL
Manual focus tele lens techniques with m4/3 for birds and BIF's Is my new lens defective? Or is this how lenses are marketed these days, saying F2.0 but in reality only usable at F8? Is this what it has come to? My old stock 50mm lens from the film camera never gave such problems at F1.8 but sadly I cannot use the old lenses on a digital camera, I learned. What's the point in buying a fast lens if you can't use it at it's advertised fastest setting. It wasn't until I adjusted the apeture to about an F8 that things looked normal and things looked in focus. The lens was manually focused to infinity. So when I went to use the new lens at night while up north, trying to focus on the night sky and take advantage of that fast F2.0 apeture, the stars all looked like big glowing bulbs, big circles. Links provided only for the purpose of product identification: The new lens is an M.Zukio 12mm F2.0, bought and delivered from Toronto (I certainly hope there was no damage in shipping). So I bought a faster lens and took the new lens with me up north, hoping to have the same or similar ease of use and success which my film camera and original lens gave me. Ok it's not the best of the best but I got good results with it and an F3.8 lens at night and I wanted to improve upon things. I bought a new lens for my upgraded camera, Olympus OM-D E-M10ii. I posted this in the lenses forum and it was suggested to post this here.īack in the film days with my venerable Olympus OM-10 and the stock F1.8 50mm lens it came with, night photography was a joy and so simple.
