Would omissions in the rule-set still count as those behaviors?Rumpsteak said:I suppose if I had to reduce it to it's simplest form it would be "Intentionally performing any action that is not allowed by the game's normal rule-set.
Would you consider it cheating if someone made a trainer/code themselves?Baldr said:Using any outside knowledge or software to aid in a game, this includes Walk-thrus, codes, hints, and exploits you didn't find yourself.
There is vary degree of opinion to what is acceptable and what is not.
Yes . Because you are making the game easier , thus giving you and advantage . Usually people do this to have an easier tine getting past a certain part which is giving them trouble , which is cheating .adamtm said:Would you consider it cheating if the game was started on hard and then lowered to normal and then back to hard?krazykidd said:Cheating is breaking any of the established rules in the game . Be it due to a bug or a cheat doing something that you weren't meant to do/have . Example : using a bug or a code to have infinite ammo in a game is cheating. But unlocking infinte ammo by completing the game first is not cheating.
Then you have things like exploiting something in the game to make things easier on you / give you an advantage . Example : going through a game on normal , then lowering the difficulty to beat a boss and raising it back up again is cheating . But going through the game on normal , then lowering the difficulty for the rest of the game is not cheating . Starting a game on normal and raising it to hard and lowering it back down is not cheating .
Is only baseline>baseline+1>baseline not cheating?
Well, it's cheating if I feel like I have cheated. Like if I am about to lose a game and I just don't want to. I cheat, I feel guilty afterwards, and not satisfied because I have won.adamtm said:IMPORTANT: Please answer the question of -what- cheating is first, not how it makes you feel or if/when its ok to cheat.
If the game allows for macros, scripts or other in-game stuff, I don't consider that a cheat. If it comes from outside the games rules/programming than it is.adamtm said:Would you consider it cheating if someone made a trainer/code themselves?Baldr said:Using any outside knowledge or software to aid in a game, this includes Walk-thrus, codes, hints, and exploits you didn't find yourself.
There is vary degree of opinion to what is acceptable and what is not.
First reply, and I already see exactly what I would have said, only worded better. Kudos, buddy.piinyouri said:Circumventing the games natural limitations for your personal gain.
For the record, I have no qualms with folks who do this in any incarnation offline.
Online with other players however, you are scum.
Both are cheating though.
Using an exploit is cheating as well.
I played skyrim and fallout without using the pause option to eat food but i don't really consider it cheating...it doesn't make sense for me to be able to do it during combat so i don't but cheating?...nah. It's more a way to expand the challenge than cheat i guess...it's more like a special difficulty setting you make for yourself. On Kingdoms of Amalur or other Diablo clones i don't mind so much...drinking potions mid-swing is how it is intended, despite that making no sense in reality. I try not to do it but i don't consider it cheating...if it were multiplayer 1 vs 1 then i would be more concerned about it.adamtm said:Would you consider using consumables in a fight to be cheating as it would decrease the difficulty.CannibalCorpses said:Using anything outside the normal game rules to beat the game so...walkthroughs, guides, bought overpowered weapons as DLC(burnout paradise f1 car). Then we have codes that allow you to circumnavigate the challenge so the more traditional god mode and infinite ammo. This is fine if the game allows it normally(saints row 3) but not fine if you cheat to get it(jetpack in san andreas).
Basically anything that removes the challenge so i guess by that reasoning there would also be exploits(finding a way to level up without being in any danger...finding a safe spot where a boss can't get to you but you can still damage etc). I also add playing a game through on easy first because it makes the hard playthrough far easier if you know what to expect in advance. Not technically cheating but shares enough of the traits for me to consider it as such.
Just for the record i never cheat but do use exploits, i find myself, to speed certain things up like levelling or item aquisition in RPGs. The second playthrough is always with a guide to mop up sny remaining achievements aswell but i feel thats ok as long as i've beaten the game properly at least once.
Example: The combat in KoA (or most hns games actually) can be often a bit challenging especially on Hard and with enemies that play against your resistances, however you can HP-pot instantly and just outlast most fights with the use of excessive potting.
Would you consider having watched someone play a game and then play it themselves to be cheating?
Example: Watching someone playing Dark Souls in your household and then playing the game yourself.
I agree with this, aside from the exploit part.piinyouri said:Circumventing the games natural limitations for your personal gain.
For the record, I have no qualms with folks who do this in any incarnation offline.
Online with other players however, you are scum.
Both are cheating though.
Using an exploit is cheating as well.