No, but have an "informative" rating.You know how so many racing games try to make the race more exciting by artificially slowing down the AI cars in front, and speeding up the AI cars in back?
--Patrick
No, but have an "informative" rating.You know how so many racing games try to make the race more exciting by artificially slowing down the AI cars in front, and speeding up the AI cars in back?
Oh yeah, it's a big thing in console racing games. The burnout series was a particularly egregious offender of this. Also Split/Second, Need for Speed, Tokyo Extreme Racing, etc etc etc. Some people call this process "rubberbanding" (not to be confused with the symptom of latency called the same word) because it's like there are invisible rubber bands securing your vehicle to all the competitor vehicles, thus the farther they get from you, the harder the game pulls them back toward you.No, but have an "informative" rating.
--Patrick
More reason to like Road Rash, then. If you weren't catching up to the first guy, he was just gone.Oh yeah, it's a big thing in console racing games.
Road Redemption is actually the spiritual successor to Road Rash, so it all makes sense, naturally.More reason to like Road Rash, then. If you weren't catching up to the first guy, he was just gone.
--Patrick
Not even just racing games... Banjo-Tooie is infamous for it's Canary Mary race sections: In order to win, you mash a button to get your mine cart to move fast enough to beat her flight speed... only if you go TOO fast, she rubberbands in front of you at a speed higher than you can achieve. It's thought they did this to go against kids using turbo controllers but the threshold is so low that most players can trip it accidentally.Oh yeah, it's a big thing in console racing games. The burnout series was a particularly egregious offender of this. Also Split/Second, Need for Speed, Tokyo Extreme Racing, etc etc etc. Some people call this process "rubberbanding" (not to be confused with the symptom of latency called the same word) because it's like there are invisible rubber bands securing your vehicle to all the competitor vehicles, thus the farther they get from you, the harder the game pulls them back toward you.
It sounds crappy, but I was a huge Burnout fan, and I have to say, yes, it does make every race a bit more exciting when you can only play casually. As far as Road Redemption goes, on the other hand, I appreciate not being coddled, even if it means 2 out of every 3 races I've run so far I've ruined my chances at placing 3rd or better within the first 30 seconds of the race with mistakes that gave the AIs an uncatchable lead. It makes it feel so much more of an accomplishment those times I actually do win.
THE THING.Wait. What are we doing?
Fortunately, there's only like three of those. The others are - sigh - Batmobile-related puzzles.So, I got to play about an hour of Batman: Arkham Knight.
Nick was right, the Riddler's racetracks can eat a giant bag of syphilitic dicks, both in its concept (yes, the freakin' Riddler is going to set up racetracks to prove his mental superiority to Batman.... da fuq?) and its execution.
How is mgsv for someone who has never played a metal gear game (besides revengeance)?This has been a monster year for games, I must say.
For me personally, Witcher 3 and now Metal Gear Solid 5 have been screamingly excellent.
I think you could get by with just getting a summary of Peace Walker and Ground Zeroes.How is mgsv for someone who has never played a metal gear game (besides revengeance)?
I felt the same way when I went to Tripolis, a Greek resto. I walked in and sat down, it was nice but it didn't grab me like I thought it would. I like Greek food and this is a pretty typical small mom & pop traditional Greek place.Shadow of Mordor
It's okay. It's honestly not grabbing me like I thought it would. Normally, I dig sandbox games but so far? I don't know. It's okay. It's a pretty typical revenge story.
So far, I haven't done any story missions. Just buggered about, killing orcs - including a few captains - and collected a few things.
It's weird. I thought I'd be all over this game.
Polar opposites.[DOUBLEPOST=1441468147,1441468079][/DOUBLEPOST]Out of curiosity, what's the cutscene to gameplay ratio in MGS5? Because it was the ridiculous among of cutscenes in MGS4 that killed it for me. I used to enjoy the series (loved MGS, liked the others), but that cutscene ratio was ridiculous.
It's steeped in it's own juices. MGS3, Peace Walker and Ground Zeroes are the crucial ones to know.How is mgsv for someone who has never played a metal gear game (besides revengeance)?
Not even remotely the same situation.I felt the same way when I went to Tripolis, a Greek resto. I walked in and sat down, it was nice but it didn't grab me like I thought it would. I like Greek food and this is a pretty typical small mom & pop traditional Greek place.
I sat a bit but I didn't order anything from the menu. I just sat there and checked the menu, spoke to the staff and checked out the silverware.
It's weird, I really thought I'd like this place.
Yeah, if you don't behead them, you'll often see them come back, but looking slightly different. Killing one with an arrow, for example, might make him come back later with a big steel plate over his face.Shadow of Mordor is confusing. I killed like three captains who ganged up on me at once, and they all immediately came back to life nearby unexpectedly and then ganged up and killed me, which raises their power and then promotes a bunch of unknown uruks. That doesn't seem fair.[DOUBLEPOST=1441478808,1441478752][/DOUBLEPOST]And yes, I know I beat them. I got the big red cross-out animation. The internets tell me that I have to behead them to make them stay dead.
I've never played any Metal Gear, I'm done the first two missions of V, and it's amazing. I don't have a fucking clue what's going on, but it's fun as hell anyway.How is mgsv for someone who has never played a metal gear game (besides revengeance)?
If you like seeing chaos, wait until you can poison the orcs' grog.Shadow of Mordor
I'm enjoying it a bit more, but still not as much as I thought I would. Maybe I got my hopes up too much after all the hype and praise the game got.
Still, it's pretty fun to release some of those orc dogs on a camp and let them run loose. One time, I had a pack of five just wrecking shit all over the place. It's kinda fun to just let chaos loose on a camp in different ways. Blowing up campfires, dropping a hornets nest, uncaging an orc dog.