• brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    People understandably love to hate Oblivion and Fallout 3, but I feel the side quest writing had heart, like groups of devs got to go wild within their own little dungeons. Their exploitable mechanics were kinda endearing.

    …And I didn’t get that from Starfield? I really tried to overlook the nostalgia factor, but all the writing felt… corporate. Gameplay, animation, Bethesda jank without any of the fun. I abandoned it early and tried to see what I was missing on YouTube, but still don’t “get” what people see in that game.

    If you want a big walking sandbox in that vein, I feel like No Man’s Sky would scratch the itch far better, no?

    Meanwhile, BG3 and KC2 completely floored me. So did Cyberpunk 2077, though I only experienced it patched up and modded. Heck, even ME Andromeda felt more compelling to me.

    • variouslegumes@reddthat.com
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      2 days ago

      Oblivion is my favorite Elder Scrolls. I actually played it again recently and thought it held up pretty well. I’m a sucker for wandering lush bucolic landscapes though.

    • cuteness@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      I got Cyberpunk in December and KCD2 in February. At this point I’m convinced I’ve spoiled the entire RPG genre for myself for the next decade. I can’t imagine playing 2 great games back to back like that again.

  • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    The article totally misses the big intervening step between Skyrim/old Bioware and the failure of Starfield/Dragon Age: CDProjectRED.

    While those studios largely just made “more of the same”, CDPR made Witcher 3 and then Cyberpunk 2077. Both games are way better narrative experiences and pushed RPG forward. Starfield looks very dated in comparison to both, and Dragon Age failed to capture to magic. Baldur’s Gate 3 and Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 are successes because they also bring strong narratives and emotional connections to the stories.

    Starfield would have been huge if it had been released soon after Skyrim. But now it just looks old fashioned, and I think the “wide as an ocean, as deep as a puddle” analogy is good for Starfield. Meanwhile Witcher 3 - which is 10 years old! - has quests and storylines with choices and emotional impact. BG3 and KC:D2 are heirs to Witcher 3.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      People like to write off CP2077, which is such a shame.

      …And maybe this makes me a black sheep, but I bounced off Witcher 2/3? I dunno, I just didn’t like the combat and lore, and ended up watching some of the interesting quests on YouTube.

  • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    The joke of these games is that they aren’t notably more weird than titles Bethesda and Bioware were famous for turning out. Hard to get more weird than Fallout’s more esoteric vaults or Morrowind’s bizarre cults and exotic cultures.

    BG3/KC:D have been, if anything, a direct successors to the old classics. They’re faithfully propagating the fundamental ideas these old titles represented in a way the new studios are unable to reproduce.

    Also, honorable mention to the poor bastards who released Disco Elysium and then got their studio stripped out from underneath them by their financiers. Absolute gem of a game and you should feel free to pirate it without a twinge of guilt.

    • ultrafastsloth@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Just finished Disco Elysium few days ago, watched the credits roll from start to finish to see all the great people working on it, such a great game…now I am sad for what happened to them, I didnt know that

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 days ago

      Morrowind is over 20 years old, and there hasn’t been a FO game with compelling plot lines since New Vegas. You are living in the past.

  • Galle_@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Could somebody please explain fo me how either of these two aggressively cliche and generic games are in any way “ambitious, weird, and unexpected”?

    • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      “Aggressively cliché” huh?

      So… Where are all the realistic medieval sandbox RPGs? You know, of the kind set in an actual historical period?

      Or… Or… How often has capturing the freedom and complexity of D&D in a videogame been attempted so accurately?

      For something to even approach becoming a cliché there’d have to be a lot of that particular something done in exactly that particular way. So please do give a nice long list of games exactly like Kingdom Come Deliverence and Baldur’s Gate 3, because clearly everyone must’ve missed them.

  • addicity@lemm.ee
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    4 days ago

    It’s funny and sad knowing that Bethesda once were the company making weird and ambitious RPGs.

    Morrowind is one of the weirdest and most ambitious games of that era.

    • TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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      4 days ago

      Morrowind was thier hail mary to stay in buisness.

      Then they gave the series to Howard and his crew…

      It’s like the super bowl champs giving the next decade to the Bears.

  • owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    This shouldn’t surprise anyone. When you look through the classics, they’re not “typical”. Hell, one of the most iconic games involves a plumber fighting a punk-rock turtle to save a princess, with a variety of mushrooms both helping and hindering.

  • HalfSalesman@lemm.ee
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    3 days ago

    I wish there were more new sci-fi RPGs of that quality.

    I do hear CP2077 is good now and I keep meaning to play it.

    TBH I’ll probably end up enjoying Starfield once I get around to trying it as well.

    • PraiseTheSoup@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      I’ve had cyberpunk since launch and the only thing that has improved is stability. The game is still a hodgepodge of half baked RPG systems, most of which aren’t even necessary to interact with. No amount of polish can change the fact that it’s a turd underneath.

      • sexual_tomato@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 days ago

        I can tell you haven’t booted the game up recently because they completely redid the perk system and cyberware not too long ago.

        CDPR has been atoning for the sin that was their failed launch for years. In my opinion, the game is a good game now.

    • Something Burger 🍔@jlai.lu
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      3 days ago

      Yes! BG3 and KC2 devs made amazing games but for some reason decided to have them take place in the most generic, boring medieval/fantasy setting.

      I want a pirate RPG, or sci-fi, heck even a hardcore Mario CRPG.

      • Galle_@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        It’s BECAUSE of the generic, boring medieval fantasy settings that they were successful.

    • ArtemisimetrA@lemmy.duck.cafe
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      3 days ago

      I’ve heard people take that approach with Starfield and still be very disappointed. If it’s space you want and are ok with creating your own story, Elite Dangerous is getting a pretty big revival

      • HalfSalesman@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        Its mostly just that I want a Morrowind/Oblivion/Skyrim with a sci-fi setting. A solid story, lots of side-quests, and a dynamic world that reacts to the player. I’d probably enjoy a modern metropolitan criminal setting as well for an RPG like GTA’s settings but Elder-Scrolls/3D-Fallout gameplay but you never see that at all.

        Space is cool though.

        • Galle_@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          I don’t believe you. That game exists, it’s called Starfield, and it failed specifically because of its sci-fi setting and for no other reason.

          • pyre@lemmy.world
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            10 hours ago

            fucking lol.

            • terrible game design
            • zero game direction
            • nonsensical script
            • not even 2 dimensional characters
            • incredibly unlikeable companions
            • bad dialog
            • fallout 4 style fake choices and railroading, only one way to complete most quests,
            • open world" that requires fast travel, completely undercutting exploration
            • immersion breaking loading screens for literally everything, even following cutscenes which aren’t used for bg loading for some reason
            • spaceship fantasy that barely makes use of the spaceship, it’s just a toy you can decorate but can’t properly pilot, space combat is horrendously bad even though other games nailed it in the fucking 90s
            • planet exploration fantasy that breaks planets into tiny chunks even though no man’s sky existed for years
            • open world fantasy where discovery is undercut by the fact that the same assets are reused over and over. like not even texture and models randomized to have some variation, but entire buildings copied including the placement of objects inside.
            • classic Bethesda style afraid to lock the player out of anything approach that means you have no choices to make, just get through everything in the order you like … be a cop and a thief and a merchant and a cultist and a garbage man why not
            • vast space fantasy with a gazillion planets yet you are the center of everything
            • scifi universe that doesn’t have means of long distance communication for some reason, needing you to go back and forth between planets just to relay messages

            i can go on but got bored.

            the fact that you claim that the only problem starfield had was it’s scifi setting when massively successful scifi games like cyberpunk, deus ex, half life, nier, mass effect etc exist just proves you know nothing about video games.

            and more specifically your seem to have no idea what people want from rpgs if you even consider starfield to be one worth mentioning, let alone an exemplary one.

    • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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      3 days ago

      The freedom that Morrowind gives you has never been matched by other Bethesda titles. I think the only path that’s blocked to the player is joining the Sixth House, but at least you can kill Vivec before confronting Dagoth Ur

      I can’t speak for Daggerfall’s freedom as I haven’t really delved into it, but I know it has 6 different endings depending on which faction you ally with.

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      3 days ago

      None of what you listed is “new”. Also, Morrowind wasn’t actually “strange” in the slightest. Plenty of fantasy RPGs had elements of sci-fi and weird bug shit (see: Wizardry and even Might and Magic) and the “you can screw up the main quest” was similarly common at the time. Planescape I’ll give you.

      Which is also true here. BG3 is not “strange”, It is literally the third Baldurs Gate game and continues most of the same themes and concepts. Yeah, it is a whole lot more gay but even that is not out of the ordinary for CRPGs at this point and had been pushed by companies like Larian, Obsidian, and Owlcat. Hell, the Mass Effects and Dragon Ages deserve a LOT of props for how horny and gay they were and normalizing the idea of picking the right dialogue options for a sexy card cutscene (also see CD Projekt Red).

      And KCD2 is one of the most bog standard power fantasy games out there.


      Like most articles of this variety, this is just a fancy way of saying “people should make good games”

      • 032 Mendicant Bias@feddit.uk
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        2 days ago

        Yeah, it is a whole lot more gay but even that is not out of the ordinary for CRPGs at this point and had been pushed by companies like Larian, Obsidian, and Owlcat. Hell, the Mass Effects and Dragon Ages deserve a LOT of props for how horny and gay they were and normalizing the idea of picking the right dialogue options for a sexy card cutscene (also see CD Projekt Red).

        Haven’t played BG3 yet, but I’m interested to read this because I’ve noticed a lot of discussion seems to be about romancing characters, and I don’t remember that being a prominent feature in the first two. That said, I was a kid, so maybe that just went over my head at the time. Or is that something that Larian brought in from their other games?

        • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          There were no sex cards, but if memory serves you could “romance” Jaheira (while effectively standing on the still warm corpse of her husband), Aerie (I remember that being kind of fucked but it has been 20 years), Viconia, and one of the boring dudes.

          The “romances” weren’t particularly well written but… they honestly aren’t much better these days. We mostly just, as a culture, have moved on from needing everything to be a storybook romance and understanding that sometimes you just need a bang. Which makes “romance” in games a hell of a lot easier.

          But also, since BG2 (well, NWN), Bioware have basically made their entire thing “romance options” and so forth. Similar to how Obsidian and Owlcat decided the real culture war was Turn Based versus Real Time With Pause. And Larian realized that we could do all the environmental nonsense that was originally only an option for tabletop games with GMs who didn’t know why you were asking when it last rained.

  • Adulated_Aspersion@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    But BioWare games used to be the top tier gaming company standard for excellence. Bethesda used to release amazingly ambitious titles that were unmatched (albeit buggy!).

    Greed outweighs the love of games.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      When do you think that stopped though?

      There’s a lot of love for Skyrim, but I feel like there was already deterioration in the side quest writing, even strictly looking at Oblivion/FO3, not Morrowind.

      As for BioWare, even ME3 was starting to show some cracks, even if you set the ending aside. And I loved Mass Effect to death. Heck, I’m even a bigger Andromeda fan than most.

      …Point being I think we clung to BioWare/Bethesda a little too hard even when the signs of deoxygenation were there.

      • Adulated_Aspersion@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Completely agree. BioWare started it’s downward trend when it thought it could cash in on MMORPG billions by creating Star Wars: The Old Republic. Don’t get me wrong, Bioware made awesome games until ~2010. They were bought out by EA in 2007, and that is where we can clearly see that passion was lost. Good games still came out, but they weren’t great.

        I will always hold a special spot in my heart for the Elder Scrolls. I’ve played since Daggerfall in the late 90s. I got into Fallout later, but went back and played the originals (except for tactics). A lot of people hate on Skyrim as being janky, but I was there for the original release. Did it have issues? Of course, and it still does. But this was 11 / 11 / 2011 we are talking about. Skyrim was doing things that no one in gaming was doing well, and they told a good story to boot.

        The issue that I have with most studios is that they step away from the ideas of furthering or completing a story just because they can’t think of a new gimmic or mechanic to make it hugely profitable. They need those profits to justify the staggering wages paid to the CEO’s. Not to the writers, programmers, or artists.

        So Bethesda lost a lot of love when they (like BioWare) attempted to cash in on MMORPGs with Fallout 76.

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Funny thing is SWTOR has some great art, heartfelt voice acting and quests, great soundtrack and such, but at the end of the day it’s buried in a grindy.

          On the other hand, I tried Fallout 76 (after it was patched up) drunk with friends, and it was boring as heck. The quests were so dull, gameplay so arbitrarily janky and grindy. Drunk! With friends! Do you know how low a bar that is :/

    • Galle_@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Rogue Trader is actually good, but people who eat up medieval fantasy slop like BG3 will probably hate it.