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by barrkel
4772 days ago
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And less flexible, more scripted behaviour is one of the biggest things driving me away from gaming these days. Most seem to end up as a sequence of action bubbles punctuated by cut-scenes, often with super-heavy hints about the "correct" way to handle the situation - sometimes even unwinnable (through e.g. infinitely spawning enemies) until you do things the "right" way. And the resulting primary gameplay experience is boredom; felt most heavily recently with Bioshock Infinite. The other type of game is the open world formula, featured in Assassin's Creed and GTA, and to a certain extent Fallout, Skyrim etc. But these become boring in another way; they rely on making navigating the territory interesting, but eventually the novelty wears off and you just want to enable the "instant teleport" function. I still miss games like Thief, where navigating the territory was the main challenge of the game, but the territory was carefully enough designed, yet still very open, and not seen repeatedly enough to become boring. Dishonored came within 60%, but the player character was too powerful. |
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To that list i'll add system shock 2 and Dues Ex 1