At a guess, you.The_Darkness said:And I'm seriously looking forward to meeting Leviathan. I may even buy it dinner... (What food do Reapers eat?)
Because those are the same style games as Mass Effect and have had a similar response to their endings? I COMPLETELY understand the reservations of the author. It has nothing to do with catering it's just common sense that some people will not be bothered to play extra content for a game that gives them a 'nothing mattered' ending. I am one of those people.Saviordd1 said:Yet no one calls the same foul when Dawnguard came out, or when ME2 overlord came out years ago, or when knights of the nine came out for Oblivion...the list goes on; DLC or even expansions tied into the original game aren't unusual and normally don't get the same amount of skepticism.
I wonder how many people bought The Wind Through The Keyhole? Just sayin'...Goofguy said:Would you read a newly added chapter in a previously read book that had a crappy ending? If I wasn't impressed with it the first time around, why should I bother paying to read some chapter slapped in the middle of it?
As you said yourself earlier, there is no real right answer, its down to a matter of taste and personal preferance. I'll personally admit its a bit harder to get personally "invested" in dlc that is released following a finished storyline, but for me I am relying on the quality of the dlc storyline itself to keep me entertained and to give me value for the money. Blizzard has a pretty good record for this in my oppinion, in both DA2 and ME2 dlc, so I dont think I'll be dissapointed.Andy Chalk said:But in all of those cases, the fiction in which the DLC was set was ongoing. They could very easily have taken place after the main storyline had been completed. Not so with Leviathan. Mass Effect 3 ended Mass Effect. How do you compellingly follow up on that?Saviordd1 said:Yet no one calls the same foul when Dawnguard came out, or when ME2 overlord came out years ago, or when knights of the nine came out for Oblivion...the list goes on; DLC or even expansions tied into the original game aren't unusual and normally don't get the same amount of skepticism.
There's a big difference, and I think it's a large part of why there's such an outcry over games with bad endings or disappointing games. Our medium of choices requires far more time and effort to enjoy than other popular forms of storytelling. If it takes you thirty hours to read a book, it's an incredibly long book but you've not been required to be actively invested that entire time. You're experiencing the story without participation.Nimcha said:Have you never read a book twice?
Doesn't that depend on your ending? I went with synthesis (which AFAIK is technically the "good" ending, as you can only get it if you've been enough of a Paragon and it essentially boils down to "everyone gets to live together in harmony"), and I can see that being an interesting setting for future games.Andy Chalk said:But in all of those cases, the fiction in which the DLC was set was ongoing. They could very easily have taken place after the main storyline had been completed. Not so with Leviathan. Mass Effect 3 ended Mass Effect. How do you compellingly follow up on that?Saviordd1 said:Yet no one calls the same foul when Dawnguard came out, or when ME2 overlord came out years ago, or when knights of the nine came out for Oblivion...the list goes on; DLC or even expansions tied into the original game aren't unusual and normally don't get the same amount of skepticism.
The difference is that Mass Effect is a game that has always claimed to have the player shape the story and make decisions that affect what happens. Unless this DLC actually does that, then it's not adding anything significant to the plot. It won't matter what happens, as everything still happens as it did before.Nimcha said:You could say the same for any (side) mission in the game. I fail to see how that's a point against this DLC.Andy Chalk said:It sounds pretty cool, but is it actually interesting enough to bother with? We all know how the Mass Effect story ends, after all, so no matter what you do or what happens in Leviathan, the outcome will be the same.
Knowing how something ends doesn't need to detract from its entertainment value. Have you never read a book twice?
Still a difference between the Dark Tower series and my previous statement. It's a whole book that was added to a series with a fantastic ending. However, I still have yet to read it... I should definitely buy it, thanks for reminding me.SonicWaffle said:I wonder how many people bought The Wind Through The Keyhole? Just sayin'...Goofguy said:Would you read a newly added chapter in a previously read book that had a crappy ending? If I wasn't impressed with it the first time around, why should I bother paying to read some chapter slapped in the middle of it?
(I actually quite liked the end of Dark Tower, and have a - library, I should point out - copy of Wind waiting to read. I just don't want to, because there's no way it can have a decent impact on the story. It'll just be a book in which nothing important happens, and probably goes back to Wizard & Glass style prequel)
I mentioned before that I quite liked the Dark Tower's ending, but (aside from yourself) everyone else I've discussed it with hates it. I've heard it called a cop-out, lazy writing, an insult to the readers etc etc. So I can't really see how the examples are that different - if we take the Dark Tower as one long story, isn't Wind just another chapter? Being a midquel, it isn't going to add anything to the overall story or change the ending in any way, much like this Leviathan DLC.Goofguy said:Still a difference between the Dark Tower series and my previous statement. It's a whole book that was added to a series with a fantastic ending. However, I still have yet to read it... I should definitely buy it, thanks for reminding me.SonicWaffle said:I wonder how many people bought The Wind Through The Keyhole? Just sayin'...Goofguy said:Would you read a newly added chapter in a previously read book that had a crappy ending? If I wasn't impressed with it the first time around, why should I bother paying to read some chapter slapped in the middle of it?
(I actually quite liked the end of Dark Tower, and have a - library, I should point out - copy of Wind waiting to read. I just don't want to, because there's no way it can have a decent impact on the story. It'll just be a book in which nothing important happens, and probably goes back to Wizard & Glass style prequel)
yeah, this is why i havent, unlike in the last 2 mass effect games, played through the story more than once. different reasons however, its more like... i know how the story ends, one way or the other, we pull it off. i spent 100+ hours over 3 games doing everything i could so that i would have the best chance i could to win, and i did. i tied up just about every loose end there could be before moving on from each game, so the story of Shepard, MY Shepard, has ended.Sniper Team 4 said:I feel your pain. I own both the PS3 and 360 versions of the game, and while I got all the trophies for the PS3, the ending just made it so I couldn't get those last achievements on the 360. Knowing that none of your choices matter in the final moments of the game just kills the entire trilogy for me too. I don't feel the weight and dread behind the choices anymore.Gizmo1990 said:Despite my hatred for the ending (for me the EC just turned the Shit into polished shit) I was never one of the super angry, bat crap crazy people as I loved the rest of the game. However I have tried to replay it twice now and I just cannot do it. The ending has actualy managed to suck out the enjoyment for me. For all 3 games. Something about knowing that all the epic stuff you do will end with a magic space kid telling you a bunch of bullshit that makes no sense has ruined the whole series for me.
Bit pissed of about that so I will give it a miss.
I wish I could be as excited about this as I was about Mass Effect 2's DLCs, but I just can't. My forces can already stomp the Reapers, and knowing that this 'traitor' Reaper will only increase a number on the table and not change anything else just kills it for me. Adding Zaeed and Kasumi changed the ending to Mass Effect 2. This will not have the same effect for me. I'll still buy this and play it, but for the first time it will be for the trophies and achievements first, and storyline a distant second. And that kills me.
(sorry if this is a double post. Got an error message the first time I tried to post this)
Honestly I thought it was worth it...depending.CriticKitten said:Speak for yourself.Saviordd1 said:Yet no one calls the same foul when Dawnguard came out, or when ME2 overlord came out years ago, or when knights of the nine came out for Oblivion...the list goes on; DLC or even expansions tied into the original game aren't unusual and normally don't get the same amount of skepticism.
I was calling foul on Dawnguard when they told me I'd have to give them $20 for it. I will never be convinced that it has nearly enough content to be worth a third of the original title price, especially when the lists that people have compiled suggest that it's not nearly as much as it sounds like. >_>
By making the story itself interesting. Even if it doesn't play into the ending people can still load the saves that are automatically made before the final battle and play through the DLC for what it is.Andy Chalk said:But in all of those cases, the fiction in which the DLC was set was ongoing. They could very easily have taken place after the main storyline had been completed. Not so with Leviathan. Mass Effect 3 ended Mass Effect. How do you compellingly follow up on that?Saviordd1 said:Yet no one calls the same foul when Dawnguard came out, or when ME2 overlord came out years ago, or when knights of the nine came out for Oblivion...the list goes on; DLC or even expansions tied into the original game aren't unusual and normally don't get the same amount of skepticism.
The Catalyst isn't concerned with such things. Slavers and mercenaries are easily policed whilst what the Catalyst is trying to protect us from is potential galactic genocide. It's the difference between the world as it is right now with warring nations, violent revolutions and organised crime but largely stable versus what happens after Skynet is activated.SonicWaffle said:I think the Catalyst is being hilariously optimistic in assuming that, say, Batarian slave traders or Vorcha mercenaries are going to settle down and buy a farm just because everyone is now technically part synthetic. War? War never changes, even if the biological makeup of the combatants does.
Hmm. I thought that was the message the Catalyst was trying to impart, that melding the two types of lifeform would lead to peace. Plus, y'know, in my playthrough I made peace between the Geth and the Quarian, the Krogan and the Turian, basically I united the entire galaxy. It seemed pretty peaceful overall!Mysten said:The Catalyst isn't concerned with such things. Slavers and mercenaries are easily policed whilst what the Catalyst is trying to protect us from is potential galactic genocide. It's the difference between the world as it is right now with warring nations, violent revolutions and organised crime but largely stable versus what happens after Skynet is activated.SonicWaffle said:I think the Catalyst is being hilariously optimistic in assuming that, say, Batarian slave traders or Vorcha mercenaries are going to settle down and buy a farm just because everyone is now technically part synthetic. War? War never changes, even if the biological makeup of the combatants does.