A Skip Button for Boss Fights

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Kerg3927

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CritialGaming said:
4 fucks is no where near upset. That's under my quota for a normal conversation bro.
You give exactly 4 fucks about this issue. Not 5, not 3, but 4.
 

Erttheking

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Kerg3927 said:
erttheking said:
... I don't want to have anything to do with Blightown if I can. The slug through the marsh at the bottom is a pain in the ass, regardless of whether or not it poisons me.
Arrogant Elitist Tip: There is a ring you can get that allows you to run fast in the marsh.
Oh, you mean that one I had and the area was still a pain in the ass? Are you going to make points or just waste my time?
 

Lunar Templar

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just put me down for the 'gitgud scrub' camp.

cause why even bother playing the game, or any game for that matter, if your just going to run when the game presents a challenge.

God help these hypothetical snowflakes if the ever go online ...
 

votemarvel

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Kerg3927 said:
Yep, the skip button would be sitting there like an evil snake with an apple. Some would have the discipline to keep trying until they persevere, some wouldn't, and many of those who gave up and skipped it would feel shitty afterward and regret it. Like a turd.

Overcoming adversity and being rewarded is a great lesson for anyone of any age. Because of this skip function, many would get a different lesson... give up at the first sign of adversity. Yeah, overall it's not that big of a deal, but it's certainly a step in the wrong direction and sends a horrible message.

Both sides have what they think are valid opinions on this matter, and "Git gud or gtfo!" is certainly as valid as "But I'm terrible and lazy and I deserve to be able to press a button and win!"

At the end of the day, there are other games that you can play if you don't like a particular one, and the developers don't have to cater to everyone. And that's not opinion, it's fact.
If the person felt bad about using the skip then they could load a previous save and go back and do it again. Though games not having a decent save system is another topic entirely.

I have to overcome adversity at my job, in my personal relationships, when I work out. Why on Earth would I want that in my leisure time as well? Why must my free time be filled with the same adversity as my real life just because you believe it should be. Does me having Skip the Fade installed for Dragon Age: Origins for example in anyway hurt your gaming experience?

That seems to be a thing you are missing. People do like those games, just as I enjoyed LA Noire. Why should an option you don't have to take be such a horrible thing for you?
 

ex951753

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This entitlement culture is really taking off isn't it? The devs don't owe you anything. If you don't like it, don't buy it. There's a thing called Twitch and Let's Plays.
 

Kerg3927

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erttheking said:
I repeat my earlier question. Should we take out cheat codes because they teach the lesson that dishonesty is the best way to success?
I haven't thought much about cheat codes since Doom, 20 years ago, so I don't know. Are those still a thing? I will say that cheat codes have two advantages over a skip button. 1) They are called "cheat" codes, which makes it clear that if you use them you are cheating; and 2) They are out of sight, out of mind. The game doesn't tell them to you, so it's not an "official" part of the game. The majority of gamers are probably unaware of their existence for any particular game. It's not sitting there beckoning to every player to use it every time things get a little tough.

I liken them to mods for PC games. If you know where to look, you can find mods to do all sorts of shit to break the game and allow you to cheat. But to me it's different if the developer outright gives you a cheat button and makes it an official part of the game experience.

Developers don't have an obligation to teach the morals you want them to teach, in the same way they don't have an obligation to put a skip in if they don't want to.
Never said they did, but I appreciate the acknowledgement you make in the latter part of that sentence.

No. Not really. I doubt the developers of Doom were sending a message beyond "killing demons is cool."
Some games, not all. RPG's for instance are usually riddled with moral lessons, sometimes to its detriment if it turns too political, IMO.

It is. If you're an arrogant elitist, frankly, fuck off. I'm sorry, this narrative about "game designed for good players who want to work to become good" adds around three layers of assumptions to intent of design, all of them being rather self masturbatory. "Are good players or players who want to work to become good a bad thing?" They are if they're unbearably smug and elitist about it. "If not, then why is it bad if they tell people who complain about the game difficulty to simply put in some effort to get better or go play something else?" Because it often comes with a certain level of smugness, arrogance, and "I'm better than you," all over a video game. It also assumes all complaints about difficulty aren't legitimate, as if Fake Difficulty never works its way in.
If someone likes the game difficulty as is, how else are they supposed to defend it from attacks and complaints from people like you? I mean a game they love is being threatened. It's natural to go on the defensive. "Please leave this game alone. I love it just the way it is. Please please please." How is that? Better than "git gud"? Less smug?

Might I suggest that not everyone is as obsessed with winning as you and Critical are? That they just want to enjoy the game on their own terms? And maybe you can just stop assuming that everyone who does this will avoid every single challenge? Or does that stop you from looking down your nose at them?
So you accuse people of making it into a zero-sum game and for using straw man arguments, and then you go right ahead and try to make it into a zero-sum game by using straw man arguments. "Not everyone" ... "everyone who does this" yada yada. Of course not everyone wants the same thing. That's why there are different games for different people.

I'll go fuck off now.
 

Kerg3927

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erttheking said:
Kerg3927 said:
I'll go fuck off now.
Not a lot of point in responding to your points then, is there?
Probably not. From what I can tell, you're arguing just to argue, because you hate "elitists" or anyone who would take pride in any sort of accomplishment. And now you're going to sneer that video games are not accomplishments. Neither is bowling, but most bowlers would feel pride if they bowled a perfect game. And you would sneer at them and tell them to fuck off. It's all based on hate. Hate hate hate.

Someone must have invaded and kicked your ass in Dark Souls once, and then did something like this...



... and you just haven't quite gotten over it.

But not everyone who loves a challenge is elitist. Some of them just love a challenge. And not all of them are smug. They silently take pride in what they are able to accomplish, however insignificant it is in the grand scheme of things. Hell, I don't even really PvP, so no gloating here, no one to gloat to. But I screamed at the top of my lungs when I finally beat Fume Knight. And unfortunately that's a feeling all the skip button people will never experience. I'd like to encourage people in those situations to keep trying until they overcome, because it's worth it, IMO. You'd like to encourage them to give up. So we're never going to see eye to eye on this issue.
 

Erttheking

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Kerg3927 said:
Probably not. From what I can tell-
I'm sorry, I'm getting mixed messages from you. First you say
Kerg3927 said:
I'll go fuck off now.
And then you keep talking to me. Well which is it?

But the conclusions you draw are hilariously wrong, so if you're still around, let me get a word in edgewise.

I hate anyone who would take pride in accomplishment. Strawman argument, please point out where I said that. I'm going to snear that videogames are not accomplishments. Strawman argument, please point out where I said that. The closest I can think is when I said that people should get over it if they feel bad when they skip a level because it's a video game. Because skipping a level in a video game is not something that is worth feeling that bad over.

That is a hilariously inaccurate narrative. It's amazing the shit people make up about me in a desperate attempt to make me look like the bad guy.

Was I talking about people who like challenges? No, no I wasn't, because I did not imply that people who like challenges are elitists. It seems I have to ask the old question. If I'm criticizing people for doing X Y and Z and you're not doing X Y and Z, why are you getting mad at me? My issue was with "arrogant elitism," which is what "git gud or gtfo is." I like Dark Souls, I just don't like people who are smug assholes over how good they are at it, as well as being rude and condescending to people who aren't on their level. I struggle to see how you could have gotten anything else out of my posts. Let the people who fight the Fume Knight decide if the feeling of relief when defeating him is worth it. It's like the Warp Whistle in Super Mario 3. Let people make the choice. I encourage people to give up. More like I think people should have options, controversial as it is.
 

Veli

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I keep thinking of two things:

When the gameplay of a boss fight (or similarly difficult part of a given game, such as some kind of escort or stealth mission) is significantly different from the gameplay of other parts of the game, with those other parts being what somebody wants to participate in. Meaning that a Let's Play doesn't fulfil the engagement in those parts of the game that actually doing it does, even if you don't really get much enjoyment out of breaking through the obstacle.

It reminds me of a discussion I recently had about Banjo-Kazooie; I wanted to engage with all of the quirky worlds, with their puzzles and characters and visuals, a lot more than I wanted to collect precise and massive numbers of notes just to get into them in the first place.

The other side is the whole thing about challenge. I can't speak for anybody else, but I know that when a challenge is something I actually care about, I don't need to be obligated to do it. I didn't fight Smough and Ornstein using only a bow because I'd somehow forgotten how vastly easier they were if I used magic.

If it's about the prestige of completing challenges, it just changes from "I'm good because I managed to get through to the next area at all" to "I'm good because I got through to the next area without skipping the obstacle"; it's just a difference of a couple of words.

I mean, one says that it's all about the out-of-game reward of feeling satisfaction out of having completed it, rather than the in-game rewards, so how is that any different if you weren't strictly obligated?

(Also, on the specific note of Dark Souls being completely unforgiving, well, tell that to me before I use the easy farming in Darkroot Garden with its Forest Wardens chasing me in order to fund my purchase of sorceries. :p)
 

Veli

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One thought that I've had is that rather than it just being a straightforward and trivial option, it was something that had an in-game cost, in a form facilitated by the kind of gameplay that you prefer or are better at.

As a Dark Souls example, a kind of reverse Bonfire Ascetic; if you prefer fighting the regular enemies and/or exploring the world, they're something that is hidden around various parts of the game or uncommonly dropped by enemies, that you need to exchange in order to get through. Making it something that still engages playing the game, and actually forming its own kind of reward system, without trivialising the gameplay or invalidating the idea of actually fighting the boss.
 

Zhukov

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Kerg3927 said:
Now I don't expect other people to put that much effort into it. But it does bother me when people obviously don't want to put ANY effort into it. They want to just skip stuff - even when they have easy-mode - at the first sign of a challenge. It's makes me sad.
Why?

If you want to treat gaming like a second job and get satisfaction from doing so then great, you do you. Why does it matter to you what other people do when their actions don't affect you or anyone else?

Some people don't game for rewards, for them the game is the reward. It's something they do to make their spare time enjoyable.

You'll notice none of the people here who don't mind the idea of skip buttons are saying that hard modes should be taken away. Only the "hardcore" crowd are trying to deny something to other people.
 

Jamcie Kerbizz

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Zhukov said:
Kerg3927 said:
Now I don't expect other people to put that much effort into it. But it does bother me when people obviously don't want to put ANY effort into it. They want to just skip stuff - even when they have easy-mode - at the first sign of a challenge. It's makes me sad.
Why?

If you want to treat gaming like a second job and get satisfaction from doing so then great, you do you. Why does it matter to you what other people do when their actions don't affect you or anyone else?

Some people don't game for rewards, for them the game is the reward. It's something they do to make their spare time enjoyable.

You'll notice none of the people here who don't mind the idea of skip buttons are saying that hard modes should be taken away. Only the "hardcore" crowd are trying to deny something to other people.
Well I could agree for a 'No challange / spectator mode' where 2 weeks post-launch it unlocks it below super easy mode, and just turns on invurnability for characters, auto-achievement collection, enables skip scene/fight on button press and gives a comprehensive list of story points/area places to hop into at button click or setting combination of it however the 'viewer' see it fit*.
Would probably be a good idea to also include this mode in review copies enabled but with NDA for reviewers to not post game material containing this mode. Since game journalist struggle to do simplest of things this would let them hop into and dabble in most of what game has to offer.

On the other hand we could expect, that game journalists are competent and professional in their job without crutches (or go bust) and gamers are intelligent enough to purchase games in generes they like (or don't get entertainment out of their purchase), enjoy the content that is pertinent to genere and are wary of games which try to mix things up, i.e. combine generes, create new ones or when they just try out new things to see if they like it.

Me being old and dad I would like to see 2nd option for my children's world to live in. However, given what is going on with this particular industry, 1st option is the one more likely. Sadly. That or complete collapse and slow build up after recession once all of the poison is flushed from the system (which also sucks but in a way that is how cycling economic growth works).

* - this use to be a part of game development. All of that was in almost every game as easter eggs, fluff, achievemnt rewards and other cheat and progress 'codes' that were unlocked by competent/curious gamers, so eventuallly over time every player could use it to access whatever they wanted. It just isn't 'skip' you bring up cheat mode and punch in the code.
 

Extra-Ordinary

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Sounds good to me.

I like to breeze through most games with light challenge, Alien: Isolation and DOOM 2016 are the only games that I beat on their hardest difficulties (at least until they added in Nightmare to Alien) and while I love the sense of satisfaction that comes with overcoming great challenge and want others to feel that, I can come up with exactly zero reasons that someone needs someone to play a game the same way I do.
 

The Lunatic

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There should also be a multiplayer mode where you only fight toddlers who can't figure out the controls.


Games are innately challenging. Now, admittedly, it's kinda different from when the price of admission used to be 50p to play an arcade machine.

However, with the death of demos, it's no surprise people feel a bit burned spending 60 on a game they can't beat.
 

Veli

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The Lunatic said:
There should also be a multiplayer mode where you only fight toddlers who can't figure out the controls.
Despite your sarcasm, in the case of online multiplayer I actually do think a bit of management to ensure games in which players are not grossly mismatched would not be out of order.

It can be a lot of fun to play against other people, but kind of disheartening to repeatedly end up with people who greatly outclass you.

The Lunatic said:
Games are innately challenging. Now, admittedly, it's kinda different from when the price of admission used to be 50p to play an arcade machine.
Indeed; you only ever need to pay for them once (at least nominally, depending on additional content), so they don't need to be designed just short of being rigged as a way of cultivating addiction and manipulating people into paying the seemingly small price of admission over and over and over again.

I wouldn't really call the straightforward experience of a game such as Journey challenging, but it's still generally acclaimed.

I know that's a particular case where it's about how the whole game is designed, but it's still an alternative to the idea that they're all challenging.
 

Dalisclock

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erttheking said:
CritialGaming said:
Hey, I'd skip some parts of Dark Souls if I could. Blight town? GOODBYE!
Hell, the Master Key lets you skip most of it and the Rusted Iron Ring makes the swamp less painful to deal with. So that might be "Cheating".

Myself, I call it "Good Riddance! Blightown can suck it"
 

Myria

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maninahat said:
From a dev perspective, I imagine the most likely outcome would be them thinking "more people seem to be skipping this boss fight than we'd like. Perhaps we should better balance this fight to make them a more reasonable challenge, and people would be less tempted to skip it."
Problem is I don't think that's how it would go at all. I suspect the most likely outcome would be them thinking "We put X amount of money, time, and effort into Y number of boss fights that Z percent of our players outright skip, so is it better for us if we monetize boss fights, monetize boss skipping, or just stop bothering with them entirely?".

I think that's really what's missing here, any real discussion of the inevitable unintended consequences if this did become a thing. It's all well and good to say "So what if someone else skips a boss, how does that affect you?", but the fact is that if it did become a thing and it was commonly used it absolutely would affect how games are designed. It would affect everyone, those who use it and those who don't.

We've already seen this in multiple genres. Traditional adventure games mortally wounded themselves with the abuse of moon logic (not to mention I can't imagine how the current gaming market would deal with the puzzles in games like Riven or The 7th Guest), only to be replaced with walking simulators that arguably don't even qualify as games. In the effort the chase ever bigger subscriber numbers MMOs have watered down and simplified gameplay and come up with ways for everyone to see everything (in fact this argument is identical to ones that have been had endlessly over raiding, resulting in raiding being watered down to near irrelevance) only to see numbers continue to dwindle and their 'niche' being threatened by MMO-lites like The Division and Destiny, only to see Destiny 2 now on the receiving end of a player backlash due to gameplay being watered down so far that there essentially is, apparently by design, no endgame.

Maybe an end to boss fights would be a good thing, they often are an overused Dev crutch. That only works if they're replaced with something better, though, and I don't see anything likely on the horizon. Maybe the removal of that challenge is what the market wants -- watching and listening to my nephews and their friends play video games, I suspect it is. Whatever the case, such a change would inevitably affect the market, affect how games are designed, would affect the gameplay of everyone.
 

Kerg3927

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erttheking said:
I hate anyone who would take pride in accomplishment. Strawman argument, please point out where I said that.
Inferred from you telling me to fuck off, and that I was being self masturbatory (didn't even know that was a word) for thinking some games are designed for good players and/or people who like a challenge. You also said that it's bad if people tell people to go play something else if they don't want to learn how to play a particular game because it displays a smug, arrogant, and I'm better than you mentality. From your comments, I get the feeling that you would see any display of pride in accomplishment as smug and arrogant.

I'm going to snear that videogames are not accomplishments. Strawman argument, please point out where I said that. The closest I can think is when I said that people should get over it if they feel bad when they skip a level because it's a video game. Because skipping a level in a video game is not something that is worth feeling that bad over.
Think I had you confused with Zhukov, sorry. But the yeah, the sneers about lighten up, it's only a video game, are in that same vein.

That is a hilariously inaccurate narrative. It's amazing the shit people make up about me in a desperate attempt to make me look like the bad guy.
I don't think you're a bad guy. I just think you have a loser's mentality.

Zhukov said:
Kerg3927 said:
Now I don't expect other people to put that much effort into it. But it does bother me when people obviously don't want to put ANY effort into it. They want to just skip stuff - even when they have easy-mode - at the first sign of a challenge. It's makes me sad.
Why?

If you want to treat gaming like a second job and get satisfaction from doing so then great, you do you. Why does it matter to you what other people do when their actions don't affect you or anyone else?

Some people don't game for rewards, for them the game is the reward. It's something they do to make their spare time enjoyable.

You'll notice none of the people here who don't mind the idea of skip buttons are saying that hard modes should be taken away. Only the "hardcore" crowd are trying to deny something to other people.
Because gaming is a community, and that community votes with its wallets, which affects future game design. So yes, if more and more people in the community adopt the loser's mentality of quit at the first opportunity, it could very well affect me.

But beyond that, as a part of the community, I simply don't like seeing other people in the community adopt a defeatist, loser, quitter's mentality. I think they are cheating themselves, and will be worse off for it. And if anyone in the gaming community ever has my ear, which you do if you are reading this, I'm going to do what I can to propagate a winner's mentality instead of a loser's one. I just am.

I don't mind easy mode's so much because I liken it to weight lifting. If you set out to do 5 sets of 5 reps on bench press at a certain weight, and by set 3, you can't do all 5, what do you do? You lower the weight and keep going until you finish. You don't skip the rest of the sets, because that would be cheating yourself. Skipping is much, much different than lowering the weight, IMO.

Finally, I have been playing video games for almost 40 years, basically since they were invented. It's my hobby, and it has been for my entire life. It's important to me. People act like this skip button would be a minor change. To me, it's not. To me, games have always been about overcoming obstacles. And if you are able to overcome all the obstacles, you beat the game. This skip button would change that. It would change gaming fundamentally. And, call me an old geezer, get off my lawn and all that, but I don't want to see that happen, because I think it's a bad direction for the hobby to take and bad for the community.
 

Kerg3927

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Myria said:
maninahat said:
From a dev perspective, I imagine the most likely outcome would be them thinking "more people seem to be skipping this boss fight than we'd like. Perhaps we should better balance this fight to make them a more reasonable challenge, and people would be less tempted to skip it."
Problem is I don't think that's how it would go at all. I suspect the most likely outcome would be them thinking "We put X amount of money, time, and effort into Y number of boss fights that Z percent of our players outright skip, so is it better for us if we monetize boss fights, monetize boss skipping, or just stop bothering with them entirely?".

I think that's really what's missing here, any real discussion of the inevitable unintended consequences if this did become a thing. It's all well and good to say "So what if someone else skips a boss, how does that affect you?", but the fact is that if it did become a thing and it was commonly used it absolutely would affect how games are designed. It would affect everyone, those who use it and those who don't.

We've already seen this in multiple genres. Traditional adventure games mortally wounded themselves with the abuse of moon logic (not to mention I can't imagine how the current gaming market would deal with the puzzles in games like Riven or The 7th Guest), only to be replaced with walking simulators that arguably don't even qualify as games. In the effort the chase ever bigger subscriber numbers MMOs have watered down and simplified gameplay and come up with ways for everyone to see everything (in fact this argument is identical to ones that have been had endlessly over raiding, resulting in raiding being watered down to near irrelevance) only to see numbers continue to dwindle and their 'niche' being threatened by MMO-lites like The Division and Destiny, only to see Destiny 2 now on the receiving end of a player backlash due to gameplay being watered down so far that there essentially is, apparently by design, no endgame.

Maybe an end to boss fights would be a good thing, they often are an overused Dev crutch. That only works if they're replaced with something better, though, and I don't see anything likely on the horizon. Maybe the removal of that challenge is what the market wants -- watching and listening to my nephews and their friends play video games, I suspect it is. Whatever the case, such a change would inevitably affect the market, affect how games are designed, would affect the gameplay of everyone.
Great post. As as a former GM of a WoW raiding guild, the part about that is spot on.