this post was submitted on 31 Jul 2023
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Gaming

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I love hearing about unique takes on game mechanics. Someone recently convinced me that limited inventories are kind of abused currently and that unlimited inventory systems would give more player choices.

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[–] Addfwyn@lemmy.ml 18 points 1 year ago (15 children)

Hate:

-Real Time Timers: Think FF13 Lightning Returns. It doesn't matter how many mechanics there are to alleviate the pressure, they make me so stressed out that I don't enjoy playing the actual game.

-Unrepairable Durability Mechanics: I mean things like Breath of the Wild where you can use a weapon X times before it breaks with no way to repair it. I end up never wanting to use "my good weapon" and tryto beat entire games with a 2x4. If I can go to a vendor and repair my gear, I don't mind as much.

-Superhard Games without difficulty options. Looking at you Soulsborne games; I appreciate that some people like a challenge, but I really think that whole genre would only benefit from giving the player options. I have noticed that seems to be getting more common though.

Love:

-Meaningful Choices: Not two dialogue options with the same end result, but things that shape either story or gameplay. This could be a major branching story choice OR something like a talent tree.

-Base Building: I like build base. It doesn't have to be a city builder or strategy game (Though I absolutely love those), but I am a sucker for games including any degree of base building. It's my favourite part of the XCom games as an example. Bonus if I have to make choices about my base, see previous point.

[–] bermuda@beehaw.org 13 points 1 year ago (13 children)

Superhard Games without difficulty options. Looking at you Soulsborne games; I appreciate that some people like a challenge, but I really think that whole genre would only benefit from giving the player options. I have noticed that seems to be getting more common though.

careful, you might alert the horde with a take like that. (i do agree tho)

[–] gus@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'll be one of the "horde" (albeit more tame) but personally I don't think developers should make their games easier or change their vision in order to broaden its audience. It kinda reminds me of the "rated R" debate. Certain people want movies like Oppenheimer to be rated PG-13 over being rated R so it can reach a bigger audience. But I don't think Nolan should be changing his vision of the movie just so it sells better

[–] bermuda@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

Your comparison doesn't make a whole lot of sense though? Movies can't be rated PG-13 and R at the same time, but games can have easy and hard difficulty levels at the same time. The developers don't have to "change the vision," they can just put a little tooltip that says hard is "as it was intended to be played" or something like that. I've played plenty of other games that did that.

I'm not out here wanting the game to "sell better," I'm here wanting to enjoy the handcrafted and detailed story and setting without having to worry too much about it being difficult. I'm sorry for not being interested in the challenge?

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