Movies, music, games, books, television, and more.
My opinions, jaded completely by my feelings, experiences, beliefs, and how I'm feeling at the time.
*SPOILERS* I will usually include a section at the end that may contain spoilers. If you don't want to know, don't read that part.
My opinion is not yours, nor should yours be mine. If you want to know for yourself, do for yourself. If you disagree, that's fine - you can make one of these for yourself for free.
My opinions, jaded completely by my feelings, experiences, beliefs, and how I'm feeling at the time.
*SPOILERS* I will usually include a section at the end that may contain spoilers. If you don't want to know, don't read that part.
My opinion is not yours, nor should yours be mine. If you want to know for yourself, do for yourself. If you disagree, that's fine - you can make one of these for yourself for free.
Saturday, April 29, 2017
Xann Black Plays... Prey Demo
The Prey franchise started as a sleeper hit on the Xbox 360, followed by a sequel which languished in development Hell - despite having one of the most awesome E3 trailers of all time - until it was ultimately cancelled.
The franchise has been "rebooted" - after only one prior entry, yes I know - by Bethesda with Arkane Studios at the helm. The trailers didn't impress me at all, but the demo...
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
Heleus Cluster Blues
“Dear BioWare: Stop making open-world games” is the title of
an op-ed recently posted on Polygon. I’ll leave it up to you if you’d like to
go find it and read it; I agree with some points and disagree with others, but
it sparked a discussion with Scott and Erich that I’ll build from here.
Essentially, I stopped playing Mass Effect: Andromeda very early on – I’ve
landed on Eos, but haven’t even walked over to the first outpost after you land
– because I was losing interest rapidly, and what I’ve seen when watching my roommate
Oz play does not endear me towards continuing.
The basic through line of the Polygon piece is that BioWare
excelled when they focused on story-driven games that – while allowing for some
freedom of mission order and exploration – were more linear in structure than ME:
Andromeda’s vast planets. Neither Knights of the Old Republic was truly
open-world, they simply allowed for freedom within set boundaries; Dragon Age:
Origins was structured linearly; Dragon Age 2 was notoriously “restrictive”
according to most players, though I like the way Kirkwall was set up; finally,
the first three ME games weren't open-world in the same way as games like Skyrim,
Dark Souls, or Witcher 3. Even DA: Inquisition, which provided the player with
more options for moving around the world map and featured huge environments,
isn't as open-ended as Andromeda.
Except that ME: Andromeda isn’t actually an open-world game,
but rather a game which features open-world segments which you can (or are
forced to) visit and explore both on foot and in the Nomad. These segments are
interrupted by times when you need to revisit your ship the Tempest to progress
a quest, or even travel to other regions of the Heleus cluster to converse with
different characters. Now, I realize none of that is beyond the pale for any
game of this genre, but the implementation is sorely lacking. Here are some
cleaned-up versions of my rambling thoughts from earlier, which you didn't
specifically ask for, but by Andraste you're getting them.
Transitions are a major issue, especially given how
frequently they’re put to use while doing even the simplest of tasks. I spend
too much time moving from between the Tempest, the galaxy map, things on the
galaxy map, and the surface. This is even more egregious in a game with an
inordinate amount of loading screens. Witcher 3 loads when you boot the game,
or load a save. All other transitions - including fast travel – take you out of
the game for the briefest of intervals, and don’t even require a full loading
screen. The cumulative effect is that you rarely have time to lose your sense
of immersion; in Andromeda, I found myself keeping my phone handy just in case
I walked through a door and the game needed thirty seconds to powder its nose.
Right after landing on Eos I realized I had equipped the
wrong armor, so wanted to go back in and switch it out; despite the Tempest’s boarding
ramp being lowered, I got to watch the whole launch sequence as we took to the
stars once more. Why does the Tempest lift off just because I board it? Does it
really have to be in space for me to run around inside? In that same vein, as
cool as it is to watch your view sweep from one interstellar object to the next
when you’re moving around within a system, it quickly makes exploring new areas
tedious. An option to turn that animation off would be nice, except those
transitions are obviously miniature loading screens, so mapping the entire cluster
will involve one repetitive camera sweep after another. Also, in case you’re
thinking “Trey already said he hasn’t done much, though, so how can he have
these gripes,” let me share some thoughts from folks who have already played most
of / beaten the game. I think you’ll find some common ground.
Scott: “When you are on a planet and then go to the Tempest
to find out you have an email saying someone needs something ON THE PLANET YOU
WERE JUST ON!”
Scott: “This is why I wondered why people complained about
Witcher load times. It was loading a no transition open world. I will wait on
it to do that. Thank you.”
Next up: The. Fucking. Nomad. No three-hour session of an ME
game should be spent driving around in the latest semi-functional space SUV.
Yes, thankfully it is slightly more durable than the Mako, and the controls don’t
make me want to break my controller. I personally was a fan of the Firewalker
missions – which I might apparently be in the minority about – because they
were self-contained enough for it not to get repetitive. Traversing terrain in
an open-world game / environment is obviously going to be a major piece of the
puzzle, though, and so you’d think BioWare could have come up with something
more interesting than what essentially amounts to running errands with a
dysfunctional family where one of the children is a seven-foot bird woman with
a shady past. (That’s not a shot at Vetra, by the way. I already love Vetra.
More on that later.)
Erich: “A lot of the character bits are amazing. The story stuff can be great, but the places
n between can be so boring. I spent hours the other day running side quests,
and other stuff, without anything interesting happening except for a great
conversation between Vetra and Liam.”
That ties neatly into my next point: There's so little of
substance to do on the planets. All the myriad bits and quests and collectibles
and crafting work in other open-world games because they're interwoven with the
crux of the main game. I don't have to board a ship, sail to an island, and
then ride Roach for ten minutes to find the one person in that region who plays
Gwent. I can play Gwent with just about fucking anyone, because Gwent is a part
of an organic, living world. Even if I did have to travel that far, at least
there’d be something to look at. Hell, if we’re talking about running the roads
in games, I actively enjoy spending time in the Regalia in FF XV because it’s
executed almost perfectly. Rarely has a game done a better job of showing you a
majestic landmark and then given you a sense of wonder at actually making your
way there. Huge stretches of the planets in Andromeda are just barren wastelands,
separating myriad tasks such as finding a mining spot, or exploring an alien
ruin for a bit of loot or research data.
While I get that these worlds are supposed to be
inhospitable when you first arrive, that doesn’t cover for what is essentially
a lack of cohesive structure tying different bits of content together. From
what I've read / heard / seen while watching people play, these are things that
Horizon: Zero Dawn and Zelda: Breath of the Wild get right. Horizon has an
entire storyline woven into it that reveals itself organically through
exploration. Meanwhile, BotW "hides" rewards and shrines all over the
place; according to Tycho, co-creator over at Penny-Arcade, basically if it
looks like a puzzle / secret within the game then it almost certainly is. Open-world
games necessitate more effort in keeping the player engaged, be it in the form
of areas populated by flora and fauna, free-form quests that emerge as you
play, or even just stunning landscapes and vistas.
Erich: “Yeah, all the backstory for the world itself is told
in the most organic way possible. There have been a few times where I wished
Andromeda had taken mechanics from Horizon. I know that that would have been
difficult timing wise, though.”
It was at this point in the conversation that I realized
Andromeda shares numerous similarities with another game in a beloved franchise
which tried to go open-world.
!
Literally, exclamation point! It's MGS V! That is, it's got
some of the same inherent flaws, at least. Both are games that aren't willing /
able to commit to being either open-world or linear. Both force you out of the
free roam environment, sometimes for little more than a cutscene or to be given
an objective back in the area you just came from. The Tempest taking off just
because you get on it really, really bothers me; now I’ve realized it’s because
my mind correlates it to the constant helicopter trips between the main game
world and Mother Base. Both feature meta-systems for sending out teams,
gathering resources, and managing R&D projects which – if we’re all being
honest – aren’t really critical to the core gameplay. Erich did point out that
Andromeda’s story is executed in a more approachable manner, and I agree on
that point; that doesn’t alleviate any of my frustration at having that story buried
under a mountain of lackluster content, though.
I want to play Andromeda. Or maybe, I want to want to play
Andromeda. Your crew seems to be pretty great, and Oz says some of the story
moments and set pieces are really cool. I love the concept of the Initiative,
and unlocking your father's memories via SAM has struck a real chord with me.
Vetra and Jaal both interest me from the word go; a few of the others feel like
archetypes we’ve already met, but one area I’ll always give BioWare the benefit
of the doubt is characters. More than once, I’ve booted up single-player to
check on my loot from strike teams – I might be addicted to that particular
meta-system – and almost decided to just play for a while. Then I'll realize I
have to spend hours listening to the whine of the Nomad, or shooting yet another
Kett / Remnant / outlaw patrol, or swooshing between stuff on the map, or looking
at loading screens. In contrast, if I really wanted to dive back into even DA: Inquisition,
I could mitigate most of my impatience by just forging ahead for a while and
ignoring my need to tick all the little boxes. That goes even more so for
Fallout 4, or Witcher 3, or FF XV, the latter of which rivals even Witcher in
terms of making an open world feel populated and fun to traverse.
Does that mean BioWare should give up on open-world games? I
don’t think so, although they certainly need to tweak the formula. That’s
something they’ve been doing since Knights of the Old Republic, though, and so
maybe they can pull it off. To that point, all three of the original ME games
are vastly different; the exploration, mission structure, dialogue and combat
mechanics were tweaked with each successive entry. The changes were praised by some
players as helping streamline the tedious sections, while others lamented the
loss of features they felt were core to the spirit of the franchise. I won’t
delve into the divisiveness of ME 3 here – there’s plenty of info out there if
you’re interested – but suffice to say many fans did not share my enthusiasm and
sense of closure afforded by the ending. Not having reached that point in
Andromeda myself, I’ll let some other folks weigh in.
Scott: “The ending of Andromeda makes me want to play more
but I don't want another game like Andromeda.”
Erich: “Yeah, I really like how straightforward the first
game is.”
So while maybe it's not that BioWare can't make an
open-world game, perhaps they shouldn't make a straightforward story-driven RPG
with one hand, make a mediocre sandbox space exploration game with the other,
then try and shove them into the same box. Truly successful open-world gameplay
requires a marriage of the macro and microscopic; there’s a way to do it that
allows for and enriches narrative-driven gameplay, but clearly that’s not what
happened in this case. You don’t have to take my word, or even the word of my
friends, and I’m not trying to dissuade you from giving Andromeda a try. If you’re
like us and came in expecting “Mass Effect,” though, I can’t help but advise
you to temper or at least adjust your expectations. I said earlier that I want
to play Andromeda, but I have no qualms about admitting most of that impetus is
because of my love of the franchise as a whole. I’m a huge proponent of making
up your own mind about media, rather than just relying on reviews, but in this
case general critical reception – and, one would suspect, the sales numbers
over the rest of the year – seems to have hit the nail on the head. Now if you’ll
excuse me, I have to go send my strike teams out one more time before bed; at
the very least I don’t have to watch the Tempest take off to make that happen.
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