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VG: Could it be that YOU are the reason they are easy? I know that Mario Kart wii was easy as hell for me to get used to, getting stars and 1st place by the 3rd cup race. My girlfriend took 5 days to get good at it. Could we, as gamers, have an easier time figuring out and completing new games? Especially having gamed for 16 years, I KNOW I have an easier time with games than I did when I first got my genesis.
adelikat wrote:
I very much agree with this post.
Bobmario511 wrote:
Forget party hats, Christmas tree hats all the way man.
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One sin which most modern games commit and which annoys me is that they are utterly linear and extremely short. I completed HL2 in 5 days, HL2:Ep1 and Ep2 in 2 days each, F.E.A.R. in 4 days, F.E.A.R:Extraction point in 4 days, Condemned:Criminal Origins in 3 days. All of these at the hardest difficulty level. I mean, come on. I pay good money for these games, they have very little replay value, and I can play them through in 3-5 days at the hardest difficulty level? It feels a bit like a ripoff. Fortunately there are games which are rather different. For example the main storyline in Oblivion took me something like a month to complete. Right now I'm playing Thief:Deadly Shadows, and it looks like it will probably take me many weeks to complete. The main reason for this is that they are non-linear. For example in Thief:DS I can complete perhaps 2 levels at most in one day. I don't know how many levels it has, but if it has as many as Thief 2 had, I'm for a long ride. That's how games should be: Non-linear and non-obvious, which cannot be played through in 3 days.
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The problem is that most of the time, they don't even want the games to be hard. There is a serious issue with the way games are reviewed these days, in that a genuinely difficult game is not likely to be beaten in any short amount of time by anyone, let alone a reviewer who is pressed for time. This means that if a reviewer is to ever see the content before commenting on it, he would either have to switch to an easy mode, or review based on only the start of a game. Neither of these cases does the game justice. As a result, if a company wants a game to be reviewed based on all content of the game, they need to make it easy enough to be reasonably beaten over the course of a few days, and gives the designers reason to make a game play well in a fast, easy play through, rather then a difficult, week long trek.
Has never colored a dinosaur.
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There are games based on the difficulty in gameplay and games based on immersion. If you want to mix both you're in for a lot of work (developer point of view). So they have to choose, if they are making an immersive game, with story and etc, it has to be relatively easy and without backtracking, to keep the most people playing and able to get to the end. If you only care about a challenge you have generaly small games, or racing, or rhythm games. The action adventure genre has become standardized by immersion and story telling, which don't mix well with difficulty.
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stickyman05 wrote:
VG: Could it be that YOU are the reason they are easy? I know that Mario Kart wii was easy as hell for me to get used to, getting stars and 1st place by the 3rd cup race. My girlfriend took 5 days to get good at it. Could we, as gamers, have an easier time figuring out and completing new games? Especially having gamed for 16 years, I KNOW I have an easier time with games than I did when I first got my genesis.
Good to see that somebody got my point.
Taking over the world, one game at a time. Currently TASing: Nothing
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I don't understand how he can find Metroid 1's ending to be disappointing despite the fact that Samus can remove her suit. :P
Nach wrote:
I also used to wake up every morning, open my curtains, and see the twin towers. And then one day, wasn't able to anymore, I'll never forget that.
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Twelvepack wrote:
There is a serious issue with the way games are reviewed these days, in that a genuinely difficult game is not likely to be beaten in any short amount of time by anyone, let alone a reviewer who is pressed for time. This means that if a reviewer is to ever see the content before commenting on it, he would either have to switch to an easy mode, or review based on only the start of a game. Neither of these cases does the game justice.
Or they could just make the game really nonlinear so you can start absolutely anywhere!
put yourself in my rocketpack if that poochie is one outrageous dude
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Or the game companies could, you know, give review sites save files/passwords to the major game review sites? Better yet, maybe review sites could just hire more people and let them devote more time to a particular game? >_>
Taking over the world, one game at a time. Currently TASing: Nothing
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But hiring people costs money. :(
put yourself in my rocketpack if that poochie is one outrageous dude
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and evaluation copies only come out a little before the retail copies do. The problem stems from the need to create the review of a game but only having a week or so to do it.
Has never colored a dinosaur.
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Yet there are very long games with good reviews. For example Oblivion cannot be completed in a week by a first-time player.
Skilled player (1416)
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Since we're talking about reviewers here, I think I'll throw this here. It's a blog post by a 1up staffer wherein he complains about having too many long games to review.
A hundred years from now, they will gaze upon my work and marvel at my skills but never know my name. And that will be good enough for me.
Joined: 12/10/2007
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Thats really funny and true at the same time. Except for the FPS jumping puzzles. Jumping puzzles just don't work in general, not just for FPS.
Joined: 2/26/2007
Posts: 1365
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Honestly, all he does is complain. Cry me a river, but I could not care less about your work load. Your job is to play and review games, a job many other young adults get wet dreams over. Love it or leave it, but don't bitch about it.
adelikat wrote:
I very much agree with this post.
Bobmario511 wrote:
Forget party hats, Christmas tree hats all the way man.
arflech
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Sir VG wrote:
Super Mario 1 took me years to get good enough to complete it. Super Mario Galaxy took me a few days. Super Mario World I did in a couple of hours.
I guess it might have something to do with your age; I was 5 when I started gaming and 6 when Super Mario World came out, and it took me about 6 months to complete, and I didn't finish Super Mario World until Super Mario All-Stars came out, and that took more than just a few saves for my 8-year-old self to finish. Meanwhile it took me a couple weeks to finish off Super Mario 64 (12 years old); unfortunately my 23-year-old self hasn't gotten around to Super Mario Galaxy because I'm still not ready to spend the cash on a Wii and the game.
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stickyman05 wrote:
Honestly, all he does is complain. Cry me a river, but I could not care less about your work load. Your job is to play and review games, a job many other young adults get wet dreams over. Love it or leave it, but don't bitch about it.
Yeah, let's not complain about bug-ridden games. I mean, we only pay for them, we can't expect them to actually test the games for us. Were he supposed to praise the games for spontaneous crashes? Or claim that having longer load times then actual gameplay is a positive thing in games? Or joyfully say that having the second half of the game be a rehash with new colors of the first half is all fine and dandy? Sure, some of the complaints were silly, but it is a humor-site, after all.
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Posts: 1365
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Neophos wrote:
stickyman05 wrote:
Honestly, all he does is complain. Cry me a river, but I could not care less about your work load. Your job is to play and review games, a job many other young adults get wet dreams over. Love it or leave it, but don't bitch about it.
Yeah, let's not complain about bug-ridden games. I mean, we only pay for them, we can't expect them to actually test the games for us. Were he supposed to praise the games for spontaneous crashes? Or claim that having longer load times then actual gameplay is a positive thing in games? Or joyfully say that having the second half of the game be a rehash with new colors of the first half is all fine and dandy? Sure, some of the complaints were silly, but it is a humor-site, after all.
You misunderstand the point I was making. I don't know where you got that I didn't like him complaining about broken games. He was complaining about long games he had to review, not glitchy or unworkable ones. I WANT him to say "Wow, game x is a shitty piece of ass fuck [/avgn] because it is too 1) glitchy, 2) load times take forever, 3) ect." I don't want to hear him complain about how much time it will take him to review good/long games. EDIT: I somehow missed all the urls when reading your first post, but I don't know what they have to do with anything. As stated twice now, I don't like complaints of workload.
adelikat wrote:
I very much agree with this post.
Bobmario511 wrote:
Forget party hats, Christmas tree hats all the way man.
Joined: 9/30/2007
Posts: 103
stickyman05 wrote:
You misunderstand the point I was making. I don't know where you got that I didn't like him complaining about broken games. He was complaining about long games he had to review, not glitchy or unworkable ones. I WANT him to say "Wow, game x is a shitty piece of ass fuck [/avgn] because it is too 1) glitchy, 2) load times take forever, 3) ect." I don't want to hear him complain about how much time it will take him to review good/long games.
Ah. Sorry for the confusion, then. My mistake. I agree with you on those points.
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First, I'm not entirely sure what's inherently wrong with complaining about workload (other than the usual impracticalities of complaining). Workloads at work can become rather much and be really stressful. Imagine your job required playing a series of long RPGs in a short period of time with a rather small deadline and bosses breathing down your neck (or some equivalent situation therein; basically just a ton of stuff to do and not much time to do it). If your paycheck depended on it, playing games can seem like homework. Second, if you read that cartoon again, you will notice that he DOES recognize that he shouldn't be complaining about "his good fortune"; so he DOES realize he has "a job many other young adults get wet dreams over." Third, I threw that in because the conversation was leaning towards reviewers' workloads, and thought that would show that perhaps there's an element of truth to it because SOMEONE was complaining about something along those lines. Whether it was right for him to complain wasn't what I intended to shift the conversation towards. Fourth... I'm not even sure WHY I'm backing him up as though he were a best friend of mine. Edit:
stickyman05 wrote:
I don't like complaints of workload.
Noted. Answers my question.
A hundred years from now, they will gaze upon my work and marvel at my skills but never know my name. And that will be good enough for me.