Perhaps you would also be interested in this dark Pinocchio game called Lies of P in a similar vein? (I keep remembering it as Life of Pi annoyingly)Haven't kept up much with gaming news and upcoming releases, but saw this one it has my curiosity piqued. It looks like Dark Souls and Bloodbourne meet Devil May Cry.
That does look intriguing as well; thank you. I don't know what it is about, I dunno, Victorian(?) era fantasy that's just captivating.Perhaps you would also be interested in this dark Pinocchio game called Lies of P in a similar vein? (I keep remembering it as Life of Pi annoyingly)
What if Bloodborne but puppets/robots?That does look intriguing as well; thank you. I don't know what it is about, I dunno, Victorian(?) era fantasy that's just captivating.
Didn’t watch it all but from some of the comments it sounds like he might be trying to excuse SP micro transactions though (because of course Ubishit put them in there) which is surprising and disappointing as this shit should be fought by everyone with a voice on YouTube.For those that care or are interested. I am only posting this because I like Gman. Other, Ubisoft can still fuck off.
I watch the video yesterday, and he at no point tried to make excuses for the micro transactions. He was even hoping that they don't do it nor put a big emphasis on it.Didn’t watch it all but from some of the comments it sounds like he might be trying to excuse SP micro transactions though (because of course Ubishit put them in there) which is surprising and disappointing as this shit should be fought by everyone with a voice on YouTube.
Example -
thepupp3tmast3r
Respectfully disagree with you Gman around monetizing resources in a single player game. The issue is that it incentives developers to create grindy content that is not engaging or fun by design, and then offering a solution to the problem they intentionally created to drive MTX sales. This is bad for everyone involved because the players can't choose how grindy the game is, we can only decide whether we put up with it, or whether we pay our way out of the issue the DEVs intentionally created (and knew about) in order to monetize the solution. In addition to that, it's also bad because it gives additional business cases for DEVs to not support modding for their PC community (because modders can take away the grind for example).
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