The Last of Us Remastered Review - A Very Pretty Apocalypse
More update than remaster, but still a complete joy to play.
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More update than remaster, but still a complete joy to play.
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You mean the part where you just met Ellie and are about to set off together with Tess outside the quarentine zone? Because that's still very early on in the game, and it has quite a slow start. The game doesn't really take off till you get to Lincoln.Xerosch said:Guys, I really, really don't want to come off as a spoilsport, but I have a question that may seem a bit troll-y.
I have played the game on the PS3 up to the point where you have to start (the first?) generator in a cellar. Up to this point I've already met several characters in the game. But the thing is... 'The Last of Us' didn't get me invested in the story at all. I usually can connect very easily with characters and get subtlety in games, movies and such.
With all the praise the game (and the writing) gets, did I simply miss an emotional entry point or does something happen a little further down the road that justifies all the praise? I'd be willing to purchase the PS4 version, but right now I'm not sure if the game simply flies over my head.
The game got fairly mixed reviews. Some love the atmosphere and the characters, while others had very mixed opinions on this. The game also received heavy criticism for the poor controls, which some felt made the game more of a chore than an enjoyment. I never owned a PS3 myself, so I can't say either way, but like all games it's not for everyone. I for one never got into the new Tomb Raider, even though people praised that. To me it was a good game, but it simply never grabbed me the way other games do.Xerosch said:did I simply miss an emotional entry point or does something happen a little further down the road that justifies all the praise?
The original version of The Last of Us stands at 95% on both Gamerankings.com and Metacritic.com and was one of the most widely praised titles of last year, the fact that it has the occasional less-than-stellar review or there's a couple youtube videos ripping into it does not mean that the game isn't loved by many. It was more like a Bioshock Ifinite situation, really.LameDuck said:The game got fairly mixed reviews.Xerosch said:did I simply miss an emotional entry point or does something happen a little further down the road that justifies all the praise?
I absolutely love the game and I hated the DLC, too. Fucking pointless.Ryallen said:Oh, and not to troll or anything, but I hated the DLC.
Yeah, it really was a Bioshock Infinite thing. I never meant to make it sound like people didn't like the game, only that it got mixed reviews by critics I trust. Some loved it, others felt that it was well made, but had several issues that made the game noticeably less enjoyable than it ought to be (the most common being critique aimed at controls and the characters themselves). So it would not be odd for some people (like Xerosch, who I replied to) to not enjoy the game.Uriel_Hayabusa said:The original version of The Last of Us stands at 95% on both Gamerankings.com and Metacritic.com and was one of the most widely praised titles of last year, the fact that it has the occasional less-than-stellar review or there's a couple youtube videos ripping into it does not mean that the game isn't loved by many. It was more like a Bioshock Ifinite situation, really.
Its the story thats good, the gameplay itself is mediocre. I liked the game for the story it told, the gameplay was meh.Saulkar said:I may, just may consider getting it as the story just grabbed me but the controls, the jarringly disorientating sensation of being in an open world game when it clearly is not and thus limiting logical options, and mechanical gameplay turned me off. What I mean by mechanical gameplay is that everything feels absolute.
A clicker is always a one hit kill animation(unless you have a special skill and a shiv), your shiv breaks after the same number of times, every-time (unless you level that skill so there is no suspense over whether your shiv will survive one more time), and the a.i. feels... hollow. Enemy jumps down ledge, stealth kill, enemy jumps down on corpse in plain view, stealth kill, rinse-lather-and-repeat four or five times. One thing that would at least add some dimension to engaging the infected would be the ability to climb onto objects that should be easy enough for Joel, even at his age, but you cannot.
I really want to get through the game to experience the rest of the story but what would be the point if I do not enjoy the game at all? People tend to get irate when I express my disappointment with the gameplay, saying that I am asking too much, but really I think that it could work, but in a different game. This game feels like it should be much more open, dynamic, and realistic than it really is and the graphical upgrade will not help me with that feeling.
The story, environments, characters, atmosphere, and graphics are a freshly baked, homemade pie while the gameplay clashes with it as a store-bought simulated whipped topping sweetened with aspartame. Artificial and metallic, it's an uncanny clash.
I WANNA LOVE THIS GAME I HATE SO BAD!!!
I couldn't get into this game for anything. I heard so much about it yet I ended up bored to death of the store and gameplay.Xerosch said:Guys, I really, really don't want to come off as a spoilsport, but I have a question that may seem a bit troll-y.
I have played the game on the PS3 up to the point where you have to start (the first?) generator in a cellar. Up to this point I've already met several characters in the game. But the thing is... 'The Last of Us' didn't get me invested in the story at all. I usually can connect very easily with characters and get subtlety in games, movies and such.
With all the praise the game (and the writing) gets, did I simply miss an emotional entry point or does something happen a little further down the road that justifies all the praise? I'd be willing to purchase the PS4 version, but right now I'm not sure if the game simply flies over my head.
It's a shame it's not on PC. I was tempted to buy a PS3 when the original came out despite owning a 360 but it was near the end of the generation. I'm tempted to buy it now but apart from Last of Us: RM, No Man's Sky and Destiny I don't quite feel the need to jump to the current generation just yet. I've been entertaining myself quite successfully with Humble Bundles in the current game drought.Metalrocks said:still a shame that it does not come out for pc. im still very interested in this game but im not getting a PS4 or 3 to play it.