criticize your favorite game(s) (non-optional) (mandatory)
criticize your favorite game(s) (non-optional) (mandatory)
criticize your favorite game(s) (non-optional) (mandatory)
civ is a liberal great man theory alternate history sim in the worst possible way
Me, chasing "barbarians" (who are more technologically advanced than me) to the ends of the earth for the 100th time: "Wait a minute...this is ideology!"
Fallout: New Vegas should have been more optimized at launch
play vanilla: ooh this is a bit rough around the edges, but i'm getting somewh... aaand it crashed
mod it: well i did 10 hours of research, downloaded mods overnight and tried to correct my load order... aaand it crashed and corrupted my save files
Try using Viva New Vegas, it even has a Wabbajack installer if you want an automated process and are willing to toss Nexus a few bucks to not have to keep clicking, or don't and just follow it like normal.
It's funny I think I've been blessed by the mod gods because I just go wild with installing a bunch and it's never done anything to the performance of the game.
Yeah, my most controversial Fallout opinion is that they should try to make the graphics look like those pulp book covers they had for the instruction manual and loading screens for the first two games
I want Fallout to look weird, but in a Frazetta kind of way
As a certified NV head, there's a lot Fallout 3 did better, like the economy, repair limitations, atmospheric audio cues Obsidian never really implemented, NPC conversations, and more. New Vegas is much better, but it could have been way better.
The Elytra in Minecraft ruined multiplayer survival servers. It is too easy to just fly around with rockets, so much so that there is no longer any incentive to do the fun thing about survival Minecraft: creating infrastructure! Why build roads, lay minecart tracks, use boats, or tame horses if you can just fly where ever you want with your magical firework rocket fuel source? It's an end game item sure, but that means jackshit in multiplayer survival where inevitably someone has a gazillion of them to hand out.
I'd prefer if they just made it glide only. Then it's something you need to build infrastructure to use: high towers to leap from!
Also Phantoms fucking suck, they are so dumb. Why does a group of hostile mobs randomly spawn literally on top of me every 3 in game days just to force me to click on a bed? Wtf. Yeah I know you can turn them off, but once again, you can't do that in multiplayer!
Minecraft peaked sometime in beta tbh
The feeling of coming home on a Friday not knowing what new shit had been added... It rocked
Warcraft 3’s legacy is World of Warcraft instead of Warcraft 4
:yea: people like to point at later things as the death of the RTS, but the move from warcraft to WoW was what did it tbh. Everything after was just heart flutters. It would never again be as big in the general gaming conscience. (Yes I know SC2 was big, but it was different, it was all about eSports and money and streaming.)
I can only actually play Outer Wilds once, replaying it isn't even close to the same magical first experience.
This is why I got my partner playing while I sit with him and narrate.
Outer Wilds is too stressful I cannot handle games with timers
Yeah I feel the same way. Doesn't help that I am anxious and on edge basically all the time.
Balatro is very fun but the replayablitiy of it hits a limit after 25 hours. The general strategy becomes less interesting once you have a deeper understanding of the game, and it leads into higher stake battles being dependant less on skill and more on just luck of the jokers you get. Winning or getting high scores loses its enjoyment quickly, especially if you try to farm gold stakes
9/10
haha Flush go brrrr
it really do be like that
Pair/High card gang go plink plonk plonk plonkplonkplonkplknplnkpkpk
Yeah this is where I’m at too. I’ve had scores go into scientific notation a few times now and now I tend to reset a lot early on if I don’t get anything that’ll help me reach that again. Which isn’t as fun.
Think I've logged nearly 1000 hours are Terraria between vanilla and modded. While I enjoy the game, grinding for materials is tedious and boring. The fun part of the game is trying new strategies to beat bosses, and its less enjoyable when you have to go mining for a stronger material for the 8th time the game. Most nodded content has these same issues, and falls into being more difficulty focused for experienced and high reaction time players, and less on making an enjoyable experience. The content on nodded seems to be less designed around ensuring you enjoy your time and more on making a boss fight for a yputuber to do hitless 8.5/10
i have played balatro for at least 300 hours. it's pretty good imo but ymmv
Yeah it does get repetitive pretty quick
oh. I'm a video game addict.25 hours
KSP has a lot of really bad physics bugs, collectively called the kraken. My most hated one is that surface bases, as they grow or even just continue to exist, will gradually and inevitably floating point error themselves into the ground and then explode.
2 is totally dead, it had a nightmare dev cycle and released unfinished then Take Two shuttered the studio
Mun/Minmus round trip is the best I can do personally. When it comes to other planets, I just adopt the Soviet approach and do everything with one-way robots. Absolutely wild the kind of things I've seen others accomplish in that game.
FWIW I think most people use mods to do the flying for them which makes the game much easier. Manually landing every spacecraft/aligning orbits is very tedious.
The feeling of achievement from a successful moon round trip is one of the greatest in all of gaming. One neat thing about KSP is that replicating historical spacecraft is a very effective way to design spacecraft. Kerbal Engineer Redux is a great way to get numbers for your craft without flying it for you.
Pokemon should of been taken out back old yeller style, revived like that ben garrison marx comic, and then given to somebody crazy like kojima or swery. Pokemon games are fun in theory, they just need somebody who doesn't know fucking anything about pokemon to make these game
I want Norman Reedus playing patty cake with a quagsire and pissing on himself when he gets stung by tentacools and getting to battle all of kojimas celebrity friends.
Y'all got infinite money, do something with it!!!!
they should have given pokemon to david lynch, including game direction, just to see what he'd do with it. woulda been a good bit, if nothing else
Pokemon is a baby game for babies. It is and always has been designed to be played primarily by small children. I say this not to disparage it but because I so frequently see people wanting it to be designed for adult skill levels and sensibilities. That's simply not what it's for.
I agree that that's what the main games are for, but I also think that there's more than enough room in Pokemon's franchise for side games that cater to older fans with more complex battle and sim mechanics. Pokemon Colosseum 1 & 2 feel like they could have been the starting point to a whole secondary line of JRPGs in the Pokemon world with unique stories and mechanics, but they never followed up on them and now those games are just a weird outlier in the franchise's history.
Babies deserve kino too
My answer to that is branch out, play Digimon, SMT, Persona, hell even Palworld
The bossfight at the end of Sonic 2 is a bullshit difficulty curve, you should be able to get at least one ring
I think every other boss in the game has some rings before it? Genuinely puzzling decision to exclude them, especially considering that it would still be quite challenging with rings.
I mean, if I was a final boss and I knew my rival was going to enter my lair and kick my ass, I wouldn't want them to be able to survive any extra hits.
At least 3 had the Sonic's invincibility flash.
Absolute bane of my childhood and I will never forgive Sonic Team for that nonsense. Should've at least dropped a 3 pack of rings before Metal Sonic.
Fallout 4 is a terrible disappointment of a game. The writing is downright awful, especially following New Vegas. The factions are nonsensical, most of the companions are not interesting and the world building is so lazy (the institute just so happened to simultaneously invent FEV on the other side of the country from the Master). The combat is clunky at best. The base building is far to limited and inconsequential. Why can't I stop playing this game.
Been playing a bit of Fallout: London, it's pretty good. Have run into a few of The Gentry so far - first one immediately asked me to murder a union organiser and then his head mysteriously exploded (but I reloaded to make sure I could betray him to join the union guy, you can).
Oh damn that actually sounds good, I've heard good things about Fallout London so I'll have to check it out
you can only play outer wilds once
New Vegas could be even more trans. Also, i've never liked the look of the games done with that Bethesda engine.
Dark souls 1's second half low-key sucks ass.
Duke's Archives and Londo Ruins are good, but everything in Izalith or the Giants' Tomb sucks a lot of ass. So you are correct on average.
The slug tree gets a lot of hate as a boss, but I think the Centipede Demon gets underrepresented. Killed as soon as you pass through the fog door because you drop to 0.5 frames per second, followed by a long run back again? Ass.
I kinda like Tomb of the Giants more than Duke's Archives. Duke's Archives feels very repetitive and grind-y. Lost Izalith really sucks ass hard. The fact that the opening to this area is a lazy reskin of the Asylum Demon tells you everything you need to know about the painfully boring lava portion of Dark Souls 1.
And the whole thing about the kiln of the first flame and Gwyn being massive letdowns leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
Cs2 is a game. Idk how to properly critize it though, cause it does exactly what it says on the box. Very competative team objective based shooter. Most of the criticisms I'd have would be around valve and how they created an underage casino but thats not the games fault.
The community is kinda shit, fps games tend to attract chuds in droves
They still haven't re-added everything they took away from CSGO, like team deathmatch for example.
I also think the death of community servers ruined the magic of this game. i hate playing with randoms every time.
Death of the community servers definitely something to mourn. 13yr old me playin the random zombies or wc3rpg mods are peak childhood memories.
Is tdm actually gone gone? Just FFA DM now? Kinda wild but ever since they added FFA I never played any DM but FFA
Team Fortress 2 is a money printer and valve should have kept updating it regularly with new weapons. The bizarre turn to a ranked esports scene sucked and made it way harder to find community servers, the best part of the game.
Elden Ring's community sucks ass. The best way to beat the game is however you want and it's really not that hard unless you intentionally cripple yourself by not using half the tools the game gives you and screams at you to use.
Sekiro's dragonrot mechanic is really confusing and seems like a tax on progressing quests if you die too much, which is already the most punishing part of the game since you lose skill point progression when you die as well as money and there's no way to go pick it up like every other Souls game. However the combat is better than any Souls game has ever been and nothing is more satisfying than perfect deflects.
Deep Rock Galactic's escort and drillevator missions are really repetitive and boring. The game is at its strongest when you're exploring the caves and terraforming to give yourself better odds against swarms. Those two types trivialize and completely remove the value of all the classes movement tools so you're left standing on the point gunning down bugs until the timer runs out. At least they had the sense to randomize core stone phases with season 5.
Heat Signature really good but some mission types are impossible without self-charging tools and those are so vanishingly rare from crates that you end up doing dozens of Soft Target missions to roll the dice on the overpriced mystery crates for good gear. And the really really high glory score missions are frequently impossible. Time limit warzone hijack, and there's defenders and predators on board the ship? Nah.
Disco Elysium kind of throws you in the deep end. What's a thought cabinet? Why am I mulling on this tie? What do any of these stats mean?
Does deep rock galactic still have a good and active community? I've been looking to get into an L4D2 type shooter for a while, especially one with a progression system. I loved Killing Floor, but it's kinda dead and passé
Yeah, DRG is still going very strong and you'll almost never have a bad experience joining up with randoms. The worst thing that might happen is a high level player joining a low hazard mission and speeding through it, denying the less skilled players a chance to experience as much gameplay in that mission. I've got a few hundred hours and have only seen a few repeat names across every difficulty level.
Espurts ruins everything as development is reduced to the gripes of too espurts builds to the detriment of all others.
Tribes was great until the new IP dork Erez leaned into espurts twitchers. If you aren't a light capper you get nerfed to hell because the twitchers cried other classes were doing their jobs, getting skillful at playing outside the box, and ending their le epic quick run during livestreams. Which led to causuals dropping out and a few dozen twitchers running all light capper teams. Which led to the death of the game.
dwarf fortress is still kinda unplayble at times without dfhack scripts. spend too much time down in the caverns and the nature aggro system kicks in and pretty soon there's hundreds of invisible enemies dragging down your fps to a painfully slow crawl because the game just has to keep track of their sightlines, a calculation that also inevitably grows more complicated as the map fills up with trees.
also the farming system is a bit silly, you only need like half a hectare of land to feed a small city.
CW before I start: I will reference a phrase now recognised as an ablist slur against the neurodivergent people like myself. A slur (I guess?) against people with autism. I am on the spectrum.
Okay. Fine.
Counter-Strike. Where do you want me to begin?
In the good old days when I started playing you had to download like 20 zip files to get the latest version of CS. You know what they did? They forced us to install a piece of software called Steam. CS was the thin end of the wedge that drove Steam into every true gamer's operating system.
Now there's good and bad aspects of Steam as a platform. Good and bad aspects of Valve as a company. But that move, funneling all us OG dial-up using CS players who were there since the beginning onto that janky ass platform that ate up system resources we didn't have to spare? Well a lot of us didn't like it. I didn't like it. But we went along with it because we wanted to keep playing our fucken shooter.
Now I have what, 21 years on Steam per my "veteran badge"? It's been longer than that, I guarantee it. I wasn't even using Steam 21 years ago, so I had to have been forced onto it earlier than that. I have a library of games I spent money on that I will never play. Slop.
But that's off-topic. Lets talk about CS.
CS is a game of rage and frustration, triumph and victory, it's play hard, play well or get brutally tormented and humiliated. Long before the horrorshow that CS has become today, it was already a torment nexus. You get killed early in a round? You're out. 15 minutes of watching everyone else have a good time while you wait for the next round to start. Get AWP'd thru the doors on Dust 2 a couple of rounds in a row? Shit I have seen people destroy expensive hardware in the fits of rage that CS can produce in its most passionate gamers.
CS is a game that will have you training with the intensity of an athlete while your body rots in a chair.
CS is a game where you better do your fucken research, you BETTER know your meta, you better not break the unspoken rules of the economy as it phases from round to round during a match or you will receive a torrent of abuse from your team mates even if you go on to clutch out the round and turn things around against the odds and have them all buying full loadouts in the following round because you dared to P90 rush B on a hunch and totally destroy the opposition. Even when you play well, if you play unconventionally you will be harassed.
You're a woman, playing CS? Forget about voice chat. Unless you want to grift. But that comes further down the line. CS has always been toxic, paranoid and intense. I remember playing CS 1.4-ish with a microsoft ball mouse that I knew so well that I could whip 360+ degree spins just from the momentum of the mouse ball and slam my mouse down on the mat to put my crosshairs on the head of someone unfortunate enough to come up those stairs on the CT side of Aztec too early in the round and catch a .50AE to the dome. "Obviously" I'm aimbotting. No fool, I have just been playing far too long and my brain is wired to work this system.
Fast forward, we'll skip CS:Source because I didn't even fucken bother. I was touching grass and washing dishes for shit pay during that period of the game's history. I returned for CS:GO. That was damn near a decade ago and I was "aged out" of peak performance. I played better than I had in my teens, I was actually good.
But then came the crates and the keys. Teenagers who were introduced to me as the children of family friends would add me on Steam, we'd queue, we'd rock shit. All femme trans team just beating gamerboy ass every night after work while doing mad drugs. But those kids, man, no life experience or education to teach them about the risks of the loot crate system, the total fucking black hole of gambling that they were playing with. I watched children cheat, grift and steal thousands, literally thousands of dollars worth of cosmetic skins from incel gamers who just liked having a girl to talk to while they played. "Hey hehe can I borrow your bayonet for a few rounds it looks so cool" and then yeet it's onto the gambling market, then gone, nothing to show for it but broken hearts and gambling addictions. Violations of the social contract, violations of the heart. A soulless situation.
I'm not gonna pretend I was above it, I bought keys. Why wouldn't I? I was an adult, I had disposable income back then and a drug addiction that made gambling feel even better than it normally does. I somehow managed to unbox stuff so rare and desirable that it once paid off my entire real world debt before I ran it back up again.
CS was the backbone of competitive shooters. The REAL deal, the hardcore shit. At least that's how we saw it. Everything else was a joke to us. We only had to tune into the international competitions to confirm it for ourselves. Suddenly gaming was legit. Suddenly we resented our families for chastising us for gaming when really, we should have been gaming MORE, that could have been US winning hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars.
Gaming. Leisure activity to unwind. Morphed into an economic monstrosity, corrupted youth minds, a whitewash for brutal regimes who hosted the tournaments. And you'd still get called a slur if you spoke in mixed company on mic.
CS:GO2? I haven't indulged yet. But I already know it sucks. I have made up my mind without playing it. I know they changed map geometry. I know they "fixed" the quirks that made each playing field unique and special and to which we dedicated tens or hundreds of hours to learning and discovering obscure boosts and 'nade techniques. But you gotta churn right? Gotta add something fresh or you'll stop growing in the market... right?
Well I dunno.
Peak for me was 1.5 with the WoW mod run on independent ISP servers over dial up internet where I could pick a class and grappling hook around the map. I wasn't at my most performant (a metric that makes no sense when it comes to how you enjoy your leisure and off-work entertainment hours) during that era, but it was chaotic and fun, our shitty internet connections meant it was always the same people queuing for the servers. You'd get to know each other. Mask appropriately and you might even be accepted and make friends.
You bring in ELO matchmaking, country-wide or even region-wide players meeting, randomly, never to see each other again? Mix in the promise that one day you could make it into the big leagues? Add in a mechanism to gacha-gamble at the micro-level and then mega-bet on the competitions?
I saw a game, a creation of love and labour that used stolen Deftones music as the loading music for some of its levels become the most monetised and commercialised franchise in existence.
Now I don't play games.
There's a lot of reasons for that, most of them are related to my broken mind, my traumas, the way I was raised. But deep down. Despite having beaten multiple drug addictions. It's because I know. I KNOW. That all roads, for me, lead back to CS. It doesn't matter what it is. I will go back. At this point I'm resigned. Will I still beat the pubes at 40 the way I surprised myself being able to do at 30? I dunno. I fear finding out. I fear the learning curve, the meta study, the pitfalls of gambling vice, the conniving, the harassment, I fear that if I cleverly ninja my way past all those laser traps I will land on a pressure plate at the end that confirms to me, finally: you're too old to game.
CS. The start and end of gaming. The only true game. Haters will disagree. I will allow them their perspectives. Hell I still aspire to create my own video games, as I have since before I graduated highschool and now after my career burnout as a software engineer. But the real game? the only game? I fear it. I respect it. I keep it at arms length or further, for the psychic damage it carries inherent to its designs which have been iteratively honed over the decades to become more and more exploitative.
I love you, Counter-Strike. I always have, since I first played you at a LAN party on novelty maps scaled such that we had the perspective of rats in a kitchen or play room, to the last time I played you before my brain broke. But you ruined games for me, you ruined the minds of many younger gamers. You will continue to contribute to the moral decay of our neoliberal dominated world.
You are the first skinnerbox I truly found, not the last I have to escape, but you might be the salvation, the salve, the cope that I need to scratch the itch that I have replaced with other addictions, more brutal lifestyle choices etc.
But you are evil. I see you, Satan. Volvo plz, etc.
GG. No ree. I am beyond ree. I am partially defined by the final defeat, as I sit out all of the metaphorical rounds now, enviously watching other gamers enjoy their time.
I wish my parents had just bought me a fucking console.
I forgive you, GabeN. Despite all the harm you have caused. The years of enjoyment you robbed from my years gaming and the years I could have gamed that I lost due to the way your co-opted and perverted versions of CS shaped my mind. I forgive you, because it is the healthiest thing for me to do.
I declare myself, the most stable, most normal CS veteran with this post.
I say this with utmost sincerity, GOOD fn post
This is is so well written. I don't give a shit about CS and I devoured it. Reads like some sort of gonzo journalism type text. If you don't write for a living or for fun, then you should consider it. This will probably be the best piece of text produced on hexbear
Woke up a little bit ago, started thinking about a thing and spiralled into a near-miss panic attack. Then I breathed through it, logged on for comfort and saw this reply. Perked me right the fuck up. Thank you. :)
I wish I wrote for a living, that'd be so sick.
You really gave me a much needed ego boost. Thank you.
ok, disclaimer, these criticisms are only refreshed as far as my last playthrough, which was late 2023, so they may be half-remembered
CrossCode's level graph very much assumes you're champing at the bit to do a good chunk of the quests in each area before you move on (or an annoying amount of grinding), which–especially in the early game–can be a bit of a slog due to the amount of backtracking and/or fetching you have to do. The justifications I've heard for this is that it's supposed to be a part of the general satire of MMOs–however, if you make something that drags on purpose and I have to play it, I may or may not feel the purpose but I definitely feel the drag.
The bit after Red AreaTM and before JapanTM honestly drags a little. I see the vision but it feels like it ballooned in scope relative to its importance to the story. Don't get me wrong, after Red AreaTM you absolutely need to have downtime, but I remember a bit before you get to the temples feeling like we should either be getting back into the plot action or at least be in another area by now, and then there's two temples. Cool idea, a bit much, especially on replay.
I think the puzzles are a design strength of the game, especially the final puzzle, but it very much constitutes a barrier to entry, especially the very long puzzles (including the final puzzle) where sometimes I just want to get back into the combat (the most fun part for me). It's more in retrospect that I like some of those longer puzzles.
I don't like the stealth sections at all. They're insta-room resets (annoying), and Lea feels too floaty to work with it. Her fluidity is great for combat but it just doesn't do precision. I'm glad that there's like, two in total, but I think they should have nixed it. CrossCode is a very active game, and IMO it thrives most when it allows you Metal Gear Rising/Sekiro levels of pure activity in gameplay. It's like if you were mid-Titanfall and they hit you with turn-based menu combat (shoot at options)–funny bit, kills the momentum, frustrating to control.
Lastly, platforming is generally fine but there are some bits where the isometric layering is poorly communicated, and it's rather frustrating when that happens. Also, I'm generally not the biggest fan of auto-jump platforming (currently first-timing Ocarina of Time so this is rather fresh) but it's implemented well-enough to not be annoying in a way that I remember.
your turn
The level design of Super Mario 64 is a messy directionless jumble of 3D assets with pasted-on themes.
One of my absolute spicy takes is that Mario 64 just isn't a good game. This is just my opinion of course but it came out at a time where 3D platformers were trying to figure themselves out and so it just feels clunky overall. I'm not sure if it's just from the awful camera either. Like the movement and platforming all feel off. Also the camera rotate noise is possible the worse sound in existence.
erasers and staplers? funny
cats and dogs actively running away? uhhh
literally not one of them are good without mods, and those mods aren't good until i've fucked with them myself
dozens of hours modding per hour played gang
playing? what even is that
The last serious modding I did was in C&C Generals, where it was a small enough game that one person could plausibly make a total conversion. That was a long time ago though, nowadays I just download other people's mods. It doesn't help that modern game studios rely on DLC and thus are incentivised to make modding less accessible generally (and anything with higher graphical fidelity requires more work/experience on the part of a 3D artist).
That said, I do try to give games I play a fair shake on its own terms before complaining
Fire Emblem: Three Houses: Manages to feel like one of the most packed Fire Emblem games while also feeling incomplete. It has 4 routes, but the first half of the game feels very similar in all routes, and two of the routes are also very similar in the second half. Master Classes are horrible, as are gendered classes. The game should have done Divine Pulse via save points instead of a turnwheel, and should have left the weapon triangle in the game. The graphics/animations are not great, and considering what they did with Shadows of Valentia it's shocking how a switch game feels like a downgrade compared to a 3DS game. Last thing I'll mention is Byleth and queer representation. Should have been more queer people in the game, and while Three Houses is better than the rest of the avatar characters in terms of characters being avatarsexual, it's still present. I feel like the game would have been better if Female Byleth were the only Byleth (I do not like Male Byleth), could not have her name changed, and was made more of her own character who's one of the co-protagonists to the other 3 protagonists (depending on route choice), rather than being a (not so great) stand-in for the player. Also the story, while pretty good, leaves things to be desired (they did Edelgard DIRTY).
Tears of the Kingdom: "Demon King? Secret Stone?" ::: spoiler TOTK Spoilers: Zelda should have stayed dead once she sacrificed herself in the past to save the future. It was something that felt emotionally moving, something that showed Zelda's power, determination, and ultimate sacrifice to save Hyrule. Only to be undone when she, for some reason, un-dragons, despite the other dragons still existing. I feel like it would have been more impactful for her to roam the skies of Hyrule for eternity, or however long those dragons live. :::
This was not a well-researched post, and I'm not going to try to make one. I haven't played through either of these games too recently, I could be forgetting things or misremembering things.
and should have left the weapon triangle in the game
Wait, I haven't played a FE since Path of Radiance. They got rid of the weapon triangle in Three Houses? What did they replace it with?
Nothing. It's just gone. Reduced to atoms...
If you get high enough skill with a weapon type, you can get a skill that gives bonuses like the weapon triangle, but otherwise there's no bonus/penalty. Idk why the devs hate the weapon triangle, but even back in Radiant Dawn, it was disabled on Lunatic.
Ocarina of Time was TOO perfect and ahead of it's time, so the water temple was very difficult on the low resolution CRT screens that was the technology at the time.
i'm first-timing it now and it's really good. my only major critique is that in retrospect with what we have now for design principles I'm really feeling that funky camera control mechanism in a similar way to how I felt it in SM64. Lock-on can be a little wonky sometimes. First-person is unintuitive without a crosshair/focus point. Those quirks are just early 3D, I guess, so it's not exactly bad design, just dated.
Also, give dedicated jump button, please god, there's platforming and it's 3D, please, I beg you, I can't keep autojumping, please
You may want to try ship of harkinian which is a recompilation of OOT with improved controls and mod support.
Also, give dedicated jump button, please god, there's platforming and it's 3D, please, I beg you, I can't keep autojumping, please
Aonuma rolling in his grave very comfortable bed right now
The most popular WoW streamer is a champion of Nurgle who has roaches crawling on him while he screeches about DEI, the people that like him are typically even worse.
DotA 2: Should have had random items as rewards from matches based on the hero you are playing, instead of entirely random. Also, they should have had in-game currency for their stores rather than just barter and RMT.
Disco Elysium: Thought cabinet should not cost a skill point to remove an already internalized thought.
EU4: More internal realm management/struggle.
WoW: Raising the level cap is always a mistake. Obsoleting content is always a mistake. Worst storyline imaginable.
Heroes of Might and Magic: Conflux in HoMM 3 was lame
Just once I would like a scenario where a big bad doesn't get the "hehe, nice try, but I ain't dying in a cinematic, I'll see you as the last/second last boss in the raid" treatment and straight up get murked like that guy on Argus.
The skill point cost exists so you need to invest in more slots, as opposed to minmaxing thoughts for free. I agree that it shouldn't cost a point to remove a thought, but there also shouldn't be a limit on how many thoughts you can have. By the time you've reached 12 levels, the game is openly very easy and the limit only makes things less fun.
Yeah, I guess what I mean is if you are like me (and pay to unlock the entire thought cabinet), then at that point you should be able to forget thoughts for free. I guess I could still exploit that, but if I've thrown that many skill points into the thought cabinet already, I think it is clear that isn't my angle.
disco elysium insists upon itself
Pirates probably suffered from sticking too close to the original formula of a game that was released on 8-bit home computers.
Did you know there's a Wii version with more cartoony graphics and motion controls in the swordfighting and dancing parts?
An expanded remake of Pirates would go so hard, they really nailed the atmosphere but you've played basically the whole game in five hours. Hell, I bet an indie dev could make a bigger and better pirate game in the same style.
Yeah I really don't understand why no indie devs have copied it
Dome keeper
Yes! It feels like they had plans for way more domes and way more player characters, instead there's just...the few they have. It really falls into that category of "roguelike, but with maybe 10 hours of actual content and not a lot of replayability beyond that."
ITT: a lot of very good games that I'll never play because now I think they're all terribly, irredeemably flawed
What have we done
The pacing in Half Life 2 is sometimes off. Specifically, going from Route Kanal to Water Hazard is bad pacing, there needs to be a change in scenery. Also, the helicopter fight on the airboat sucks and is an absolute slog. My most controversial opinion perhaps is that the episodes are where Half-Life fell off, not the lack of Episode 3. Yes, the gameplay is good but the story is convoluted and doesn't make as much sense. It makes the ending of Half Life 2 worse in my opinion.
My half life 2 take is that the vehicle sections are the worst parts of the games. I find them so tedious and they’re the biggest thing keeping me from replaying them
I just hate that the Dune Buggy causes you damage when you're initially dropped into the sand. Why am I getting punished by your physics for following the story?
i dunno what my favourite game itself is (current or all time), but I'll gladly shit on the battlefield franchise because there is no greater example of a continuous, slow motion, generational bag fumble culminating with 2042 killing the last vestiges of good favour DICE ever had.
while there are a few nonsensical chud criticisms of the franchise in the last decade (V getting bombed before release because customised woman skin existed), the consistent elimination of game mechanics specifically on the tactical/team management side to try and chase the COD/Fortnite moneybag through simplification and monetisation left everyone eventually realising that the only thing moderately 'battlefield' about 2042 was conquest being a mode and vehicles being usable. but the downward spiral started years before.
everyone knows about EA enshitification, given that they've cratered almost all of their non-sports IP at this point (and even the sports fans hate the games but keep buying that garbage), so i'm not going to write an essay on what we already know. but my boomer-ass contention is that the removal of the commander position in BF3 is like one of the core blunders for the whole franchise, the attempts to re-add it were half-baked in 4, and it subsequently killed the overarching layer of (optional) tactical teamwork that actually kept more players invested.
BC2 not having it can maybe be forgiven, as Bad Company was specifically console-focussed, still had decent squad-order mechanics and the destruction physics in Frostbite at that point were amazing. But then they nerfed the destruction, the commander role, the squad orders, the fucking class system, the availability of vehicles and even making the maps boring flat fields with fuck-all assets left anyone playing 2042 thinking "what are we actually doing here? what's the point?"
honestly, if BF1 wasn't the absolute marvel of sound design (and arguably graphic design & tech) or untapped setting that it was, the franchise would have died over a decade ago. the "love letter to fans" PR and overpromising for 2042 didn't help things. we've basically been watching EA and DICE uppercut themselves over and over for 15 years at this point, and no amount of begging for them to stop has worked.
it honestly makes me sad, which is so lame... but 1942, Vietnam, 2 and 2142 were just so engrossing for my formative online gaming years that i can't help it
i think Squad was meant to be the "more tactical Battlefield" but i never got around to playing it so i have no idea if that is correct
plus, there's eventually a line you cross with "tactical" or "realism" mechanics where you're flying closer to ARMA or milsim stuff and you've fully become a different genre
The atmosphere and ballistics are the only things in Shadow of Chernobyl that aged even remotely well.
The canonical explanation for what the zone is and how it works is sorta dissapointing because running (incorrect) theory that the NPCs talk about is tight as hell "Oh yeah its a totally unprecidented organism brought about by people fucking with psychic energy in some secret experiments and btw it hates us and the emissions are its immune response and also the zombies and monolith dudes are basically the zone hijacking the nervous systems of other organisms to act as extensions of itself"
while the actual explanation is basically "Nah yeah after the meltdown a bunch of government scientists were like 'yo lets do some fucked up experiments in the abandoned nuclear place' and shit kinda got crazy with the genetic modification and it all went nuts after we tapped into the psychic field that surrounds the earth... so anyways we're literally just five or so dudes hanging out in tubes of goo, we got a spot open if you wanna join the goo gang... please join the goo gang"
(though i may be misremembering/misinterpreting a lot of stuff here)
Majora’s Mask is too short
Real answer, Termina Bay is such a buzzkill to play through. I enjoy the associated temple but I groan upon seeing that sickly teal ocean. Woodfall/Southern Swamp and Snowhead imo had a better art direction and map layout. In comparison, the Bay has those hostile green land turds, while the water is nigh-on empty except for more enemies. The Pirate’s Fortress is fine but going back-and-forth for the Zora eggs is another buzzkill. The area fees dilapidated and empty but not in the weird or creepy way as the rest of the game (the ranch with the Flatwoods aliens, Ikana Valley).
To use a tired cliche, the area needs more “mystery” and even “Lovecraftian” influences. It’s otherwise just a polluted beach inhabited by the local Zora and pirate populations. Bloodborne did it right with the art direction of the Fisherman’s Wharf.
As a side note, I wonder what the venn diagram looks like for Majora’s Mask enjoyers and Disco Elysium enthusiasts. The mask sidequests are the best part of the game imo which translates over to DE’s.
Had to recreate this one because I refreshed instead of posting
For Undertale, I disagree with the final Chara scene at the end of No Mercy. It muddies the waters on an otherwise very-deliberate thematic overtone of the whole route (you are engaging in a gameplay strategy that is designed to be extremely tedious and grindy in a continuous slog of deliberate cruelty so banal that it’s probably for no other reason than wanting to experience everything). I’d honestly prefer that the game continued to specifically lambaste me and reinforce my culpability rather than give room for anything else.
Like, okay, let’s spitball. Chara is the only entity in the game that has enough natural determination to step in and override you. Instead of being just ‘evil child’, let’s have them be an entity that is generally non-interfering but wants to enforce 'responsibility for deliberate acts' to counteract the godlike nature of SAVE/LOAD. Maybe Chara is the intermediary who allows us to interface with SAVE/LOAD and/or Frisk, or maybe they’re just an observer of beings with high determination, or something else entirely. Instead of the consequence in Tainted Pacifist being 'evil kill bad now spooky haunted' at the very end, have Chara make a show of them seizing control in the middle of the ending sequence (at the most unresolved moment possible) and leverage the metanarrative elements of the world to inflict a depth of dissatisfaction that can only come from a game—back to title screen, save wipe. Instead of 'you experience true pacifist but game haunted oh nooo' it would be 'you can never experience true pacifist in full again. live with your choices.'
Alternatively, let’s take another option. Don't involve Chara. Don't give a true 'conclusion' in that sense. Just end with a black screen after killing Flowey that persists until you manually go into the files and unfuck the save—i.e. 'What are you still doing here? The monsters are all gone. There’s nothing left. Isn’t that what you wanted?'
Instead, it really just kinda serves to make talking about the route annoying (no Patrick, you were not possessed to do evil, you chose what buttons to press) and feels a little hackish in retrospect. 'wow evil child monster haunts the game kill everyone and you too ooh wow' is a bit of an eye-roller when tailing one of the most otherwise ludonarratively-consonant gameplay routes in an RPG, IMO.
Moving on, encounter and non-encounter area differentiation is a bit unintuitive. Pokémon solves this by having special encounter tiles, and Deltarune solves this with roaming encounters. Properly adds to the tedium of No Mercy, annoying elsewhere.
Speaking of Deltarune, you can feel the lack of a run button on replay. Rather annoying now that I’ve been spoiled with having it.
Lastly, I don’t really like Muffet’s heart mechanic. Idea is cute, but it feels like it'd give me RSI if played for a good bit.
oneshot criticism: i have to say goodbye to niko
Touhou player, I just suck ass at getting anywhere past stage 3/4 in every game
Dwarf Fortress has a very silly difficulty curve consisting of an initial cliff followed by not that much, and all of its options just increase the size of the initial cliff.
Earthbound has some quest chains that can get stuck in really obtuse ways, particularly in Twoson and Fourside.
Crosscode's DLC has that fight where Apollo is way too damn hard all of a sudden.
UFO 50 has ~5 perfunctory games in genres that clearly nobody on the team really cared for, and it's worse for it. That's Fist Hell, Star Waspir, Caramel Caramel, Campanella 3, and Block Koala. There are worse trash fires in the collection, like Hot Foot, but those are at least bad because they tried something interesting and failed.
In Super Metroid, the entrance to Kraid's hideout is poorly telegraphed.
Mario Odyssey giving you moons for every silly little accomplishment is great, but giving the same reward for korok-tier stuff and actual challenges cheapens the reward feeling of actual challenges, and they should've done a tiered system.
Rimworld encourages you to perform Eugenics on any undesirable colonists, especially with the biotech DLC. Also encourages cannibalism and harvesting your opponents organs to sell on the market for greed and profit.
Also too many quality of life mods should be in the base game.
personal nitpick with Rimworld since ive only run with small colonies of about 6 - 10, but I wish base game was more... flexible when it came to moving on the world map, even for temporary locations, wasn't so heavily focused on the home colony to the point where I have to tab back and forth between the majority of my characters exploring a map and one or two guys managing home base. sometimes I wonder what's the point of generating a world map when I wouldn't be able to explore more than a quarter at best because the game requires u stay in one location
Yeah, that's a problem I have with it, too. There are mods that let you establish outposts but they're more for passive income
I do transhumanism instead and replace every body part with the best artificial replacements. I also use mods to make said best artificial replacements manufacturable. By the time my base gets too big and my game crashes (leaving the planet is for suckers) everyone is doing everything at like 400% speed.
Isn't the developer an ancap or something like that?
I can find 10 YO articles pointing to some possibly problematic stuff which seems to have been resolved ages ago, but he shuts his mouth when it comes to politics for the most part and I'm not going to do a deep dive into his Twitter.
Based on what I could find, he's probably still some flavour of libertarianism. If the worst headline I could find on him was 10 years ago, he's probably one of the least problematic game developers out there.
Sounds like Starsector except I consider forcing an illegal AI to optimize my Funko Pop factories and maximize my organ harvesting output as the cornerstone of my war economy is something I consider a selling point
I actually do love the psychopathy in the game.
I've been selling organs to fund my robot empire
Morrowind's combat sucks even if I got very good at making it work for me. I get what they were going for, but it's a very weird thing to allow you to aim at people in first person and still have your accuracy determined by dice roll.
Shadow Empire's user interface is quite possibly the least intuitive I've ever used, and I play Paradox games.
Morrowind should have a start that gives just a little more direction and reason to keep playing.
It literally tells you "go see crackhead grandpa, he'll tell you to get a job" and then you have to scour an entire Dwemer ruin for a tiny cube and do like three more missions before grandpa stops smoking crack long enough to tell you what the fuck is going on
How much more clear do you need it to be
I don't, but if someone is used to something like BG2 (let alone a modern RPG) just finding Balmora feels like being cut loose and told "find some dude, somewhere.' yes they tell you how but the game hasn't yet taught you that you actually need to read.
Life is Strange has a lengthy stealth section in a dream sequence near the ending which doesn't really add anything to the game but tedium.
it might actually create MORE tension in the game if you're only offered the plasma cutter to fight with and nothing else.
my only full playthrough I was getting that achievement and 10/10 no notes. DS2 sucked, didn't play DS3.
Why the fuck do so many enemies have elemental weakness before you ever get access to anything that uses an element. Wasted ideas that hopefully wilo be fixed in the re-release
(OFF)
Falkner complaining about Electric types when you were blocked off from them until after his badge.
Prey (2017)
Still my favorite goddamn game it is so fucking amazing
The gameplay loop was developed in the 80s for the sole purpose of munching quarters and dick all has changed despite how much gaming has evolved
I love Portal but I would vehemently disagree with anyone who says it's a better game than Portal 2. Even just ignoring all the stuff like plot structure and graphics, Portal 2 is way ahead in terms of puzzle design. Also Portal 2 does better job at fully exploring the concept of portals, while Portal 1 feels like a tech demo in some parts
Stormworks: I think overall I'm pretty happy with it. There are some things where they don't change stuff because too many people's creations would break if they changed (e.g. parallel jet turbine bug). Also, the actual overworld game is pretty undeveloped. I think people would really appreciate a semi-live economy, though simulating the physics of that would be wild.
My main frustrations with the game are usually because I want to make things by myself, instead of downloading other people's engine controllers and ballistic computers >.>
Also having a creation tip over outside of the de-spawn range and having to restart a game because there isn't enough money to re-make it.
Then there's just a pile of parts that are either too big (pivots, sliding connectors) (usually from the early era of the game), only in one size despite it being quite a broad range of products (pneumatic piston), or just missing.
It would be nice if you could simulate/control things with hydraulics without an intervening electrical component (e.g. carburetor, piston control units), but I also get that that might be rather complicated.
It would also be nice if there was a way to have parts on non-cardinal directions at the start without shenanigans.
Also, I always play by myself and wish my friends would come join me and say "Oh wow, you're not a complete idiot" or something. :(
I just want my air to be like air and my water to be like water. That and displacement mechanics.
Final Fantasy X, a game with heavy enphasis on death and mourning, didn't feature the death of a party member. Sin is terrible and named characters die to it, but it's not the same. In fact there were few on-screen deaths.
Also, I wish the world didn't feel like it had a population of 200. I get the population was dwindling after the thousand years, but it just felt so small. I think this could have been solved by having a larger unexplored world or by explicitly stating there are villages dotted all over Spira that the protagonists cannot explore on their journey.
Also also, over the course of 1000 years only five people performed the pilgrimage to the point of defeating Sin. The practice of the pilgrimage would have fallen out of favor with such a low success rate. I'd sooner expect Spirans to move underground in tunnels as mole people.
Also also also, there was no water Aeon. Leviathan deserves justice. More Aeons in general could have explored more heroes who defeated Sin in the past.
Also, I wish the world didn’t feel like it had a population of 200. I get the population was dwindling after the thousand years, but it just felt so small. I think this could have been solved by having a larger unexplored world or by explicitly stating there are villages dotted all over Spira that the protagonists cannot explore on their journey.
There is Bevelle, which seems like a massive city, and the only place you can't explore in the game, but I know what you mean. They could've just had paths leading to places you can't go down because it isn't a part of your story journey.
Binding of Isaac can be unfair, and while yeah that's kinda the point and mastery can overcome most of that, some rooms are laid out in a way that it's impossible to avoid damage. For example, a closet filled with spikes and a large troll bomb spawning and immediately homing in. This never feels good even if damage is avoided through pure luck (such as flight or explosion immunity).
Also most bosses are fine but they do love to add at least one bullshit boss per version. Rebirth brought us the dreaded Bloat, then in AB they added Hush, a bullet hellish, tanky completion mark boss that can only be attempted if reached within 30 mins or less. That wasn't bullshit enough, so in AB+ they added Delirium, another mark boss that is hidden somewhere on the largest map in the game among 6 other bosses (which included other end bosses). Before Rep there was only 1 way to guarantee access and that was by killing Hush (2 bs bosses in a row!) Oh and the fight itself is a disorienting chaotic nightmare and honestly never fun.
I don't think anything added in Rep compares to Delirium, though I'm never happy to see Scourge or Colostomia. Mother is difficult, but honestly getting to that fight is more annoying than the fight itself. Then Rep+ added the most devastating boss of all: barely functional online co-op that can delete your save.
Obligatory "fuck Bloat"
Imma hit STALKER franchise (haven't played S2) and Project Zomboid (with great pain because it's an indie game but I have to)
STALKER: The worldbuilding of GSC is not great to be honest. A place like the Zone in real life would be an insane mess of world powers and ridiculously big and powerful corporations butchering each other to control it. To think that a place that can naturally warp reality, spawn science-shattering artefacts and control the minds of people like it's nothing is not object of contest between AT LEAST NATO and Russia is insane to me. In the game the Zone is known to relatively few people and the Ukrainian state is able to more or less "keep it under control". Everyone inside appears to be ukrainian or russian but most are freelancer weirdos who go there to be rich or hide from authorities. There is little to no foreign interference. It makes little sense that such place would go unnoticed by the world's biggest powers. In the real world a place like this would have their weak "loner", "bandit", "duty" and "freedom" factions, among others (including the mutants) be swept aside by the sheer power of entire militaries called to intervene and control the place, all of this would have immense geopolitical rammifications. It is implied in the game that outside forces know about the Zone and are interested in it's riches, but these outside forces do not intervene other than sending Mercs to do their shit and maybe finance the Monolith, but in general they leave that place alone and do not try to directly control it which is not very realistic imo. Yet despite all this I love the Zone as it is in STALKER, it's just me being insufferable, that's all.
Project Zomboid: Best zombie survival game that ever existed but it has an awful development cycle. They released one update in two years and frankly it sucks, it's broken and it added uninteresting stuff like animals and pointless crafting. Devs refuse to listen to players (who have been asking for NPCs since day ONE AND THAT WAS OVER A DECADE AGO) .Also the devs have left a lot of stuff just incomplete for years and years, from bugs to half-baked gameplay features. And tbh the game lacks a purpose and general depth, like one you get to your first month there is NOTHING ELSE to do other than finding your own way to just die or you'll just get bored and drop the game. The game is easy when you figure out the basics and surviving becomes trivial unless you push it to the absolute limit.
Eh, B42 has a lot of underlying changes. Yeah it's got busted features but it's only laying the groundwork for proper NPCs. There's a lot of engine changes under the hood which is why we have basements now, and the map can be expanded more later in ways it couldn't before. And it's always going to be a sandbox game where you set your own goals or go roleplay with others. Agree that the crafting is nonsense though. Fix cars so the models reflect if the hood is up before you add blacksmithing maybe
I don't know, I feel like PZ is a lost cause and I feel this way because the development cycle of this game has been plagued by extremely long development times, weird development choices and general lack of direction for a lot of time (from an outside point of view at least). And this deeply saddens me because I fucking love PZ, I've been playing this game since I downloaded a pirated version a little over a decade ago when it was just Muldraugh and West Point.
My biggest frustration concerning this game hovers pretty much around NPCs and TIS' denial to work on them for many many years, pushing them further down the line to be added after animals and crafting and only God know really when that'll actually happen, if at all. To me without NPCs the game feels empty and sometimes pointless after X amount of time, because you get all the shit that you're supposed to do with fellow NPCs but there are no actual NPCs around. Like the base of the entire system will be added at the end instead of being their number one thing. I think they should have added basic but functional NPCs way back that would get upgraded with each big update, that way everything would make a lot more sense and would feel organic. Like for example to me there's little incentive to engage in animal farming because I have to take care of that by myself, while I have other tasks like loot runs, securing the perimeter, cooking, organizing my loot and so on. Same goes with crafting, I can't engage in all of that because there's nobody to help me with it and because in the end there's no use for all the time and resources you've sunk into these systems, like why get 300 pieces of butter from your cows when you don't have to share it with your community or trade them? You're fully alone after all.
There are NPC mods which are buggy but also at the same time easily demonstrate how good this game becomes when there are other people running around in your world. If it wasn't for the performance issues and barebones functionality they would be perfect. It's no coincidence that the "Week One" mod got super popular despite the jankyness, because it seems to me that modders delivered what TIS couldn't. And that opens up another front, mods. They're all good, I love them, they bring so much life to the game it becomes essential to play with them (without mods PZ is really barebones). But I feel like TIS is going through the Bethesda way, just let the community fix things as if they are unpaid workers. You mentioned cars, yep, B39 was released in like 2017 or something and all vanilla cars still to this day have no animations, yet modders have figured them out and pretty much the standard these days for any vehicle mod is that they're animated. Nobody can really convince me that they couldn't spend the time to animate all 12 of their vehicles (don't know the exact number, but it ain't alot anyways).
This game could learn a lot from Rimworld, where you can just freely build your colony and play indefinitely to see what happens, since the game is a story-generator above everything else. In PZ you play to see what happens and nothing happens, perhaps four months in you get bit and you're done for (and goodbye to all your grind) or you abandon your world because there's nothing to do. I really don't know what kind of game they envisioned way back when they started to get things working, but I'm 100% sure they have changed ideas more than once.
you should definitely play STALKER 2
You think those fuckers would have let me boil the rice before coming out of early access... DayZ
Path of Exile is ubermensch slop with the same morals as gambo or whatever name UlyssesT had for GoT.
Gambo was originally a bit from
IIRC.Kenshi: after hundreds of hours put into the game and going thru multiple cycles of starting a new game, struggling to make money, fighting, losing, fighting again, building and automating a base, etc, and all the emergent storytelling that comes out of that -- I feel like it was only the combat-related systems that were fully fleshed out and ultimately, the only way to interact with the world in a meaningful way is through combat. Though the visuals and worldbuilding do great of offering the promise of a lot, the dialogue system is not developed enough to allow for any dialogue mods that integrate well with and impact the world or player characters. Animations systems are similarly limited, with the system allowing for minute customization and replacement of combat animations, and very little room for any animations not combat-related.
Earthbound can be a real piece of shit, everybody knows the clunky and limited inventory is a pain in the ass, and it is completely true. Furthermore, the story, while good, lacks a lot of personality building for the main cast of characters, which is funny cause every npc has amazing dialouge. While the lack of character building doesn't harm the ending overall, it certainly does not hit as hard as Mother 1 or 3's endings, due to them actually taking a few moments to flesh out the main cast of heroes at several points.
Total War: Empire, a buggy mess that likes to crash in the late game. Unfinished, AI is illogical in both diplomacy and a lot of battle tactics (Which makes the few times they pull a clever maneuver incredibly surprising) and nearly requires modding to be playable, either through script edits or from installing overhauls.
EU4: Now this is one I haven't thought of much, but there certainly are many flaws to find in this one. First off, 93% of the gameplay is just finding buttons to press with the right timing, that's it. The DLC's have mostly been focused around adding more buttons to press. Powercreep has been a real issue, like how Spain will have colonized most of Oregon and Alaska before a Russia player can even hope to have gotten to East Siberia. Many intended paths require RNGesus to smile upon you, and whose alternative requirements can be very difficult to achieve in comparison. (So many MP games of my friends grumbling over many such cases.) And, despite being an 11 year old game, some regions are still not very fleshed out. India and parts of the Americas lack flavour and content. And of course, the UI can be a bit inscrutable at times, with a few features hidden away or poorly explained, like the macrobuilder diplo screen. And yeah yeah, the DLC policy is terrible as it locks out critical features behind a paywall, which has only been partially fixed with updates and working older DLC into the base game.
Monster Sanctuary runs into the same problem too many metroidvanias run into, where a ton of secrets aren't really "hidden" it's more just "come back with the right ability" so there's relatively little actual problem solving and more "this is arbitrarily locked until you get the right monster." Also the character writing sucks and the plot is very meh, they fall into the trap of assuming "cool lore = cool story."
Idk if it's my favorite but it's one that I've played a lot recently:
Cassette Beasts would be better without fusion. It's so strong that it is necessary (sans grinding) for a lot of boss fights, and it's very cool and dramatic when the combat music's lyrics start, but going from two to one party member reduces the complexity of fights so much that they become less enjoyable.
A couple years back I went through a binge of three different indie monster-tamers on my switch. I thought Cassette Beasts was the least interesting. I was engaged enough to more or less 100% it (pre-dlc), but then I dropped it and barely thought much of it afterwards.
I remember Nexomon Extinction had meh gameplay, but the artwork was pretty, and the story, characters, and dialogue were all really engaging and often funny and kept you moving. Monster Sanctuary was basically the exact opposite, where the plot was totally forgettable and the art was mediocre, but the game mechanics were really well-thought out and fun. I still come back to that one periodically. Cassette Beasts was basically in the middle of these two extremes, it did everything well, but there weren't any aspects of the game that went far enough beyond "done well" to stand out as memorable.
I have not played monster sanctuary but I did love cassette beasts. I actually like the combat a lot. The shifting types and status effects made combat very puzzley sometimes, I just think going down to one monster negated that a bit.
Also I think their monster design ruled.
Look at Traffikrab
Look at Candevil
This is Tokusect, it is both a moth and a power ranger
Baldur's Gate 3 can be too safe art direction wise. I get they are trying to do the DnD aesthetic and I'm sure WotC had a specific view on what it wanted the Forgotten Realms to look like, but it feels a bit too generic fantasy.
Final Fantasy XIV needs new quest design for the main story. Dawntrail suffered because of the quest design.
Forgotten Realms is the most generic setting outside of Middle Earth that exists tho. I'd crit BG3 on giving one of the villain triad an entire third of the game and then having the last two share the final third but not really because you can throw Gortash out the window two minutes after meeting him
lost izalith is not a very good area
The player base is trash. Self included
I wish Eastward had made more of an attempt to tie the plot together. I spent the entire game excited to see how all the details relate and then it just ended with almost no clear explanations at all.
I just saw the posts where someone shipped a singularity to mining outpost and where people dated one
Wish there were good YouTubers doing letsplays of the game. Nurse did one and it was great, but I've never found any other videos like it.
SS13 has given me emergent gameplay experiences that I've quite literally never experienced in decades of gaming. When everything works, it really is magical.
Valheim is broad but not deep enough and its success is mostly due to when it appeared. If it weren't in the early access cycle and the devs had made the game they wanted to make instead having the community poke and prod them it probably wouldn't be very fun.
Satisfactory is absolutely hampered by the unreal engine's limitations.
TLoZ: A Link to the Past, the enemy respawns get annoying when backtracking.
Chrono Trigger: Rewired my brain to make me like DBZ character design
TLoZ: OoT & MM: gave me nightmares which I was not expecting going into them from the previous games in the series
Super Metroid: led to me constantly waiting for MP4 but it's totally coming this year for sure. The sheer missile-sponginess of the bosses is kinda tedious I guess?
Any Tribes game: it will never be the same and I am sad.
Dwarf Fortress, Kenshi: I cannot play these anymore because I forget to eat in real life and I will die.
Red Alert series: Yuri was kind of a misstep I feel and limited the series' development.
Sim-Anything: Maxis selling to EA for a cash grab ruined one the coolest studios ever to exist.
Any Tribes game: it will never be the same and I am sad.
this one hurt me
Disco Elysium and BG3 are both incredibly well written, to the point where my first playthrough was so good, and so perfectly fit my head canon, that playing it again with different choices and playstyles just feels tedious, and an exercise in futility.
Helldivers 2 really needs some sort of end game content. The gameplay loop is fun, but i'm not even max character level, yet I have everything unlocked, all warbonds, and maxed out resources.
El Paso, Elsewhere is flawless and there is nothing to criticize, go buy it now you losers.
if anything the Jet Set Radio Future soundtrack is too good
Genshin's character quests are a hairball. Too easy to accidentally trigger once unlocked, and then you end up with other quests locked out, including dailies. There's also limited story reward-- I don't really need a deep dive into some B-plot character who you'll never see again in the main story progrrssion.
Horizon Zero Dawn has a terrible mid game grind that can catch you out and make you never finish the game.
Battlefield 4 was terrible on release and almost unplayable for the first 3 months before it became one of the best multiplayer online shooters. Battlefield 3 multiplayer was actually quite poorly balanced and people are blinded by nostalgia. Battlefield 2 has some wonky vehicle mechanics and terrible voiceover lines, especially the Chinese voice actor was terrible.
Gran Turismo 4 has a lot of understeer by default in the handling model when using default setups, Gran Turismo 3 has a poorly structured campaign and prize/reward model. Gran Turismo 6 is basically a patch for Gran Turismo 5, with a worse campaign mode. Gran Turismo 5 took forever to release and was still unfinished upon release, the scope was just too massive for a game that came out in 2010.
The final boss race in Need For Speed Underground 2 is a massive dissapointment, it's literally the easiest race in the game, the rubber banding by the bosses in NFS Most Wanted makes certain blacklist boss races almost unplayable (I'm looking at you Earl), and NFS carbon has a mediocre open world map compared to previous installment. NFS Hot Pursuit 2010 released unfinished and the open world functionality was never implemented as intended, open world was just restricted to free roam. NFS Rivals was just Hot Pursuit 2010 with the open world functionality completed and fleshed out, honestly the games should have just been combined and released as a finished single game instead of rushing Hot Pursuit 2010.
For the Uncharted franchise, 1 is good despite it's shortcomings because without it the series would not exist. 2 was the peak, 3 only exists to set up Nathan Drake's marriage to Elana the rest of the game is just average to bad, and 4 despite being a great game, ends the way it does because Naughty Dog wanted to retire the series after the creator left. Which is sad because I would gladly play more Uncharted games.
both times i've tried to play HZD i got to the middle then couldn't finish it
You've just got to ignore all the side quests and focus on the main quests, the story is worth it and the main quests aren't that difficult. The hardest main quest is actually in the middle of the game where you fight the first fully functional deathbringer at the grave hoard (level 18 I think). If you can complete that quest, you can beat the entire game easily. Using mounts and fast travel is vital for the second half of the game too.
I really enjoyed horizon until I found the first giraffe thing and realized it was Yet Another Far Cry game in disguise, making me find radio towers to reveal the map, and lost interest
The first giraffe thing is right at the beginning of the game, and you don't actually have to do them to complete the game, it's completely optional. I think there are 5 total. It's helpful to reveal the map before traveling to an area yourself, but you can just ignore them if you want and travel using wavepoints and the signs in the game world.
Mai won't STFU when you're doing difficult enemy battles in FF7 Rebirth. The camera won't stay locked to the enemy you are fighting so a kot of battles are framed sideways or away from thr enemy as they charge, mow you on your ass or repeatedly strong strike you. You can't know when they are about to because the camera is not showing the enemy it's showing you.
Oh you just finished a section. Let's FATAL ERROR even though the game so still going. So hopw "fatal" was that error actually? Ok let's just wait for them to stop talking get control....menu....save and a crash. But at least the game autosaved at the transition.
StarCraft is too hard to play with friends and StarCraft 2 made the wrong things easy making the big army fights take 2 seconds.
Magic the gathering not only has power creep but rules and mechanics creep making the game even more complex over time. Also the focus on printing cards specifically for EDH/commander makes the format less interesting.
Pokemon TCG none of the meta decks use guys i like and it's because the ones i like all suck.
DotA and mobas are basically entirely suffering and the games are often prolonged by people who enjoy suffering.
Trails is lib as hell with a focus on Good Monarchs, just like most JRPGs. There are also a bunch of anime tropes, although I think this has been exaggerated and people play Persona and Xenoblade, both of which have just as many if not more tropes. Barely anyone dies in the story even though there are multiple wars and one plot point muddles the anti-imperialist themes. Missable quests suck and the soundtracks used to be amazing, but are now mostly farmed to one composed who is mostly just okay.
Ys is usually either way too hard or way too easy with little middle ground. The same complaints I already had about the Trails soundtracks also apply.
Yakuza has too many nonsensical plot points, even though some of them have become memes because of how dumb they are.
The turn-based gameplay sucks because it makes every fight against a level 1 enemy a slog that lasts forever because you can't skip or speed up the animations. There's also nothing as satisfying as doing a heat action in that whole gameplay loop.
Xenoblade Chronicles: 1 and 2 are very hard to play after all the QOL in 3/FR (auto pick up items, for instance). I hope they make X DE have all the QOL stuff from 3.
Monhun: archdemon mode being weaker than demon mode made no sense
Oh yeah, Xenoblade, let me piggyback off that.
1 is very very good, best story, but there's a bit of a plot lull in the midpoints of each of the Titans that can feel like I'm going through the motions. Due to how extensive the areas are, it exacerbates the needed downtime a bit far for my liking. As well, too many placeholder quests that just serve as padding/easy XP. Also, if I have to look for Black Liver Beans again, I'm reaching through the screen and killing Juju myself.
2 has my favorite combat (I miss step-cancelling ;–;). However, even though I do genuinely like the story and characters–I'd die for Nia–it's hard not to cringe recommending it to other people, especially people who aren't desensitized to animeisms. A lot of moments that feel like they're there to hit quota, a lot of things I think just feel awkward. Some of the character designs are just straight-up egregious (my go-to on this is Dahlia) and it sometimes has the aura of "we were making a gacha game specifically for that demographic but then Nintendo told us to remove the monetization so we just nixed that specifically." I love this game but with a large asterisk on it.
3 is rather polished gameplay-wise and probably my favorite in sum but it's a bit all-over-the-place due to having to accommodate both returning and new players from the outset in the story. It's the most disjointed feeling one for me, feels like it kinda scrambled to tie up a lot of ends. It's still a good story, It just doesn't have the unfettered cohesiveness of, say, 1. Best main party overall in the series though, IMO. Named my cat Mio.
Have you played X though? I will admit a lot of it is lost in haze for me because of a particularly rough mental health episode right after I finished it, but I remember a lot of it being great (it was actually my first Xenoblade game).
The anime-isms of 2 began in X, though it was tempered by the setting some. Also, getting the mech is one of the top gaming moments. Elma is a great character, and the recruitable characters are cool too. Very neat story too, though it lacks a lot of the QOL from 2 and 3.
If you haven't, the remaster comes out next month and you should give it a shot (though I don't know if I'll be getting it right away... Monhun coming out)
The blades in 2 are also an absolute mess artstyle-wise because of all the different artists involved and there are so many annoying mechanics. I have to figure out what a blade's favorite food is to get the field skill I need? Fuck off.
I hate how in Darkest Dungeon there's moves than lower the enemy's dodge, but if their dodge is high enough they'll just dodge the debuff attempt. They also could have used a few more Healbot items. Up until the Crimson Court DLC, the Vestal was one of the only reliable healers. And I say this as someone who ran a lot of teams that were just 3 tanks and Arbalest.
Cassette Beasts maybe needed a couple more quests to hide the grind, but they did a good job at hiding the grindy elements otherwise.
FFXIV has too little content being released once you actually get through everything they made in the last decade.
The price model in Victoria 3 is shit. They should have used labour theory of value instead.
CrossCode's pacing is a little strange, especially towards the start of the game which feels long and slow, and has a billion side quests available for doing much less interesting tasks compared to the later game side quests.
Trespasser doesn't run on Steam Deck no other criticism
Dyson Sphere Program is ChInEsE!!!!!!
My only real gripe actually might be that I think terraforming shouldn't cost dirt. In the game, you can only plot down tiles if you have dirt that is used as currency, essentially. It's such a boring mechanic that I use a mod to make it free.
Not a favorite game, I do still like it though, but in Stardew Valley since I'm doing a modded run currently, I think the days should be 0.5 times longer and businesses should open at 8 instead of 9. Also the tractor should be an actual in-game item. Tweak it a bit of course because it's pretty game breaking since you get to get way more done in a day.
I might add more games if I think of a few.
My main criticism of DSP is that when I played after the combat update, placing down a Planetary Shield Generator caused some kind of absurd memory leak and now I can't play that save above 1 FPS.
Also, no symmetry or copy and paste for Dyson Sphere editing? I guess it made my first Dyson Sphere design feel almost therapeutic with the amount of menial yet satisfying work that I ended up doing, but every subsequent sphere I've made since then has made me bored beyond belief.
I haven't played in a while so it's not super fresh in my mind but there is a combo of like 4-5 mods that drastically improve performance for DSP. At late game before those mods, I was getting 5fps when on planets with factories and off-world, I might peak at 25fps. After installing those mods, it effectively doubled my max framerate and like quadrupling my lowest framerate for my last playthrough when I was converting an entire family into a white science factory. I had 2 of 8 planned wedged done when I quick, along with 3 fully made spheres and was still seeing playable framerate.
All that is to say, between that and patch updates, that leak might be resolved. I'm not totally sure since I only play without combat.
I also either hand-make spheres or copy from a blueprint so I'm not sure there. I know the sphere editor is a bit finicky.
Reforger doesn't seem to have very strong moderation, it's all too easy to run into random racists. Squad on the other hand does a surprisingly good job with this, but it doesn't have that same level of realism.
256 comments
This was a sting op to figure out if hexbear is full of gamers and we failed
Tf2: remove sniper. Game should have been updated to source 2 for better mod support and mod accessibility. Removing quick play was bad. There should be a way do see other people's sprays. Let people be exposed to horrible sprays, could not be worse than all the bots. Removing speech from f2p is bad. I am not paying for that shit.
Cultist Simulator literally involves building an exploitative cult and sometimes sacrificing your followers so you can ascend higher. Though this does make for some interesting commentary when you can play as a priest who is still said exploitative cult leader or be exploited as an exotic dancer who must perpetually expose themselves more and more to the point you shed your skin and become a bug creature. Dwarf Fortress is hard, but losing is FUN! I feel like it sometimes incentivizes you to stop growing and be content where you are or not continue to dig ever deeper past a certain point when all the FUN comes from trying for infinite growth. Sure it has a high chance of killing your fort, but that's better than sitting around and nothing happening from a gameplay perspective.
I was thinking about saying Void Stranger is too long, but I can't decide if I actually feel that way. Indie games doing weird and esoteric things is a big part of what makes them cool. If there wasn't anything annoying, it'd be boring. Idk, it's not an easy thing to articulate.
The snake puzzle is bullshit though
Stalker sucks. You die in one hit, the game bugs the fuck out (especiallu vanilla clear sky), and the storyline isnt really anything special.
In Tales of Symphonia backtracking to collect the summons with Sheena doesn't add much to the narrative and only serves to take time.
CrossCode
The desert temple and the jungle area are too tedious even if they are as quality as the rest of the game. The story ending in the DLC was ass and didn't resolve some things that needed to imo, mainly: ::: spoiler spoiler Sidwell's fate :::
Rabi-Ribi
I can tolerate the fanservice because I have terminal weeb brainrot since childhood, but I can't recommend the game to anyone else even though it is a great metroidvania with awesome bossfights and music.
ZeroRanger
Breath of the Wild
It would have been a perfect game I could play forever if it had bigger dungeons and more than 10 enemy types.
in Steambot Chronicles, it sucks that your character can't wear the fancy dress.
ETA: one criticism for two games, i love both project zomboid and terraria, but both of them suck to try to get working with a controller.
The holy water is OP in the first castlevania and there is for sure some bullshit parts.
FTL is genuinely perfect.
I could write a book about the metal gear series' flaws even if limited to mgs1, 2 and 3.
Disco Elysium isn't my kind of game and I find anything that isn't dialgoue stuff to be a slog.
No FTL is not perfect. The final boss fight invalidates a lot strategies that you are encouraged to use throughout the game. Why does the ship continue to function without its crew? I want my pacifistic engineers to sap the energy out of the enemy's life support system with energy weapons until the crew suffocates to deaths. I want my cloned mantis boarders to kill everyone. I want to use fire. But you can't. The only viable strategy is to destroy the ship using regular weapons.
Night Striker relies too hard on the homing missiles as a source of difficulty in the later stages.
Rocket League is pretty great (pure kinoludo), but the best game mode (DropShot) has been sidelined by the devs repeatedly, even though it is the most unique and "easy to learn - hard to master" mode. There is also a lot of toxic players in the community, and the moderation is pretty slow and often lacking.
Dungeons of the Endless is an ideal way to drain yourself of excess executive function energy, but the steep learning curve means that you have little understanding of the trade-off decisions you are making until you've played and failed many times. It takes a while to understand the game, and it's kind of a painful process for a while.
Red Faction: Guerrilla is a mostly about using tools of destruction effectively, with some other open-world generic tasks bolted on. The driving and shooting are good enough, but mostly just barely. It would have been much more interesting if it included some building/fortification mechanics.
DEFCON is pretty cool, but it has a distinct lack of Posadism that feels like a huge lost opportunity.
Mega Man Star Force 1's story has hit me more personally than any other piece of media and in general it's well-written despite it still being a kid's game. But it really rushed the friendship between Geo and Pat, you've barely even seen Pat throughout the game so Geo becoming so wrecked by his betrayal feels forced. Pat/Rey's betrayal is also telegraphed so blatantly that it makes Geo look like an idiot.
Pat/Rey also falls into a problematic DID trope of a "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" type personality split, with an aggressive alter ego when most people with DID aren't dangerous like that.
Geo falling back into depression and fear of getting close with people, and cutting off everyone would be very relatable as someone who relapses into depressive thoughts, but the setup was too rushed as just mentioned and it's also right as the alien antagonists are starting their full-on invasion of Earth. It just made me go: "Get in the fucking mech, Shinji".
My bigger criticism is that at no point is it ever explained why everyone at Corel blames Barrett for their town getting blown up by Shinra. Every last one of them was in that room pressuring Dyne (the last holdout) to agree to the Mako plant to save their dying coal town. He was nowhere near the plant when some people blew it up. But when you show up everyone just spits on him and he just takes it because.......?????????
I always assumed that Barrett convinced everyone else to go for it or lead the charge in some way which was why he caught most of the blame, but yeah I guess they don't really say that explicitly do they. Also I'm pretty sure the Corel reactor exploding was a random industrial accident that got blamed on the town by Shinra (unless that got retconned at some point).