I REALLY Want to Like You!

Recommended Videos

Matilda Ward

New member
Feb 11, 2013
26
0
0
torno said:
Mass Effect.
Be aware, I'm not saying it's bad, I'm just saying it doesn't click with me. Which is weird, because I like it's level of open-worldness, I love sci-fi, I hear it has a great story and I'm a sucker for good stories and I enjoy all those things in other games but in Mass Effect, with all those things thrown into one place, I don't know, I think there's something I'm not getting. I have tried twice to get through the first one and I just couldn't. I hear the second one is an improvement in every way but I need to start from the beginnings of franchises. Don't ask me why, I just do. Maybe I should go back and try again... AGAIN.
Heck, I got through Devil May Cry 2 with BOTH characters (another thing I HAD to do) just to get to the new DMC, I'm sure I could slog through Mass Effect.
I agree with you I abhorred the first mass effect, no matter how much I tried to get into it, I just couldn't. Mass effect 2 though, it is definitely an improvement
 

Corinthian

New member
Apr 7, 2013
26
0
0
Skyrim.

I very much wanted to like it. But after the first few hours, the world just felt so dull and lifeless to me.

Of course, it doesn't help that I thought the combat was absolutely turrible too. And would it have killed Bethesda to have made to paladin-esque armor in the game? I want to be a mace-wielding champion of light, dammit!
 

Sir Pootis

New member
Aug 4, 2012
240
0
0
TES3: Morrowind.

My main issue is in the gameplay and lack of any direction. I'll explain by recounting my experience.
I begun the game and woke up to an opening sequence, and was immediately told to go and go see some guy, but on my way I came across a cave with a convenient door. Having decided to play as an archer, as is my preference in this kind of game, I see a bandit guarding the entrance, so I decide to shoot him from a difference. My arrow hits for NO damage, and he runs up to me and kills me before I can actually do anything about it. After repeating several times, I finally manage to kill him by going back to the store in town and buying a sword because archery is impossible in this game. So I proceed and get killed by a mage. Giving up with the cave, I decide to proceed with the game proper. I see some sort of miniature creature, and kill it in about 5 hits, and at this point realize my stamina is empty because I had the audacity to run to my objective because I wanted to get there within the next century. Eventually reaching the next town, stopping at every signpost to make sure I was going the right way because you have no sense of direction (I'm not saying games always need objective markers, but at least give me a useful map), I eventually find the guy after searching for about half an hour. He instructs me then to go find ANOTHER guy to proceed, and then I just give up and quit from boredom and frustration.
 

Frozengale

New member
Sep 9, 2009
761
0
0
Dragon Age : Origins

Now mind you I've played the entire thing and I don't think it's a bad game, but there are just so many little things that bug the ever loving crap out of me.
I don't like most of the characters, Shale's the only one that I find really interesting. Morrigan CAN be interesting but still annoying as crap. Leliana was only interesting after I played Leliana's Song, which is DLC, so if it weren't for DLC I would still say she is crap.
The skill systems seem to be set up in such a way as to just piss me off. Linear skill trees where half the stuff doesn't really matter. Skills that sound awesome on paper but feel like a waste when you get them. And so many non-passives for Wizards that by the end of Awakening I couldn't access all of my spells. Also there is no respec, which is the worst sin any kind of RPG can commit.
The combat is fairly boring and easy. I never found much reason to switch to my rogues or warriors because their combat was just so dull, at least with mages you actually do stuff. I was playing on Nightmare and the combat was easy.... that's just wrong. By the end of it I had just decided to open the console and kill everything using commands except for the boss fights, because the boss fights were the only interesting things.
Good introduction to the world but everything is so bland for the most part. There are a few really interesting ideas that never get explored to any kind of real depth.

Luckily once I finished Origins I picked up DA2 and while it is crippled due to the short development time I found it to be superior in almost every way. The only reason I can't wait for DA3 was because DA2 was a game that I couldn't put down. DA:O was a game that I struggled to play through. Sadly I fear that they will go back to the DA:O formula because people are whiners and can't see the forest for the trees.


Then there is Borderlands.

I actually loved this game when it first came out. Never got to finish it, but eventually picked it up several years later on Steam Sale. And my word I'm not sure why I enjoyed it before. It is quite literally the same thing over and over and over and over and over and over and over and you get the idea. The loot system is the only good aspect about this game. I wanted to love it again, I wanted to feel the way I did when I first played it. But now I see it for what it truly is, a Skinner Box in game form.
 
Sep 9, 2007
631
0
0
TES4 - Oblivion

I tried playing oblivion about six months after it was released, after completing a marksman/alchemy run in Morrowind (which I called the "Potion Powered Human Gauss Cannon" run). I'm not really sure why it didn't click for me, I completed the main quest once, as well as the Shivering Isles main quest, but I couldn't play for very long before I got bored. My completed run was with a fairly generic sword & board fighter that dabbled in throwing fireballs, fixing armour and breaking locks after finding out that they gutted the marksman skill.

In my last run, I nearly got into the game. I forget what the build was, but I was actually starting enjoy the game... and then it crashed. While I was saving. Which corrupted the save. I don't use quicksaves (Elder Scrolls games and quicksaving don't mix well, I've discovered) and the last autosave was about an hour before hand, so I said **** it and haven't touched it since.
 

DementedSheep

New member
Jan 8, 2010
2,654
0
0
Mass effect 1. I wanted to like it because I like bioware rpgs usually but gameplay was boring, side missions were all the same and IMO the world wasn?t particularly interesting.
 

Pebkio

The Purple Mage
Nov 9, 2009
780
0
0
Bioshock Infinite.

It was the only game I've ever preordered and one of just four I've ever paid the full $60+. I mean, Bioshock... on a floating city. I can't begin to express just how cool I think flying cities are... I even want zeppelins to be our main transportation because they're the only airships we've got. And I also loved the game mechanics of Bioshock. So Bioshock... but on a floating city now. Whee!

I so really wanted to like that game... and I tried, I really did. I even made light of the regenerating shield thing. But at the end, that was just one of many bugbears that made this seem like "Halo in a fantasy 1912... and also with magic".

---

Dragon Age and 2.

Turns out I'm not as big of a fan of the group rpg thing if it's not on a tactical top-down view. I like it in Tales of Symphonia, that was about it... but that's because I had better control of everyone... and we all didn't cluster in stupidly.

---

Saints Row 3 (I know it's "The Third" but nobody who isn't "sniffing their own farts" gives a crap).

Boy, I sure did enjoy Saints Row 2. It was one of the first games I got with my 360, because they both were Christmas gifts. I had no idea it was a GTA clone... that was better than GTA4. So when SR3 came out, I thought it was going to be SR2 but now with cooler stuff. But everything was corporate, and without contrast.

---

Xcom: Enemy Unknown.

Just kidding, I'm digging the hell out of Xcom.
 

TIMESWORDSMAN

Wishes he had fewer cap letters.
Mar 7, 2008
1,039
0
0
torno said:
Mass Effect.
Be aware, I'm not saying it's bad, I'm just saying it doesn't click with me. Which is weird, because I like it's level of open-worldness, I love sci-fi, I hear it has a great story and I'm a sucker for good stories and I enjoy all those things in other games but in Mass Effect, with all those things thrown into one place, I don't know, I think there's something I'm not getting. I have tried twice to get through the first one and I just couldn't. I hear the second one is an improvement in every way but I need to start from the beginnings of franchises. Don't ask me why, I just do. Maybe I should go back and try again... AGAIN.
Are you using the PC version? Because the console versions are NON. I couldn't play ME till I picked up the PC version, now it's my favorite game.

In other news, Lollipop Chainsaw. I thought, "Suda51's a pretty cool guy, eh makes silly and doesn't afraid of sales charts", but I played that game to the end and, geez, it sucked. Not in the way Superman 64 sucks, but in the "this was almost good but it isn't" sucks, and to me that's worse.
 

Joccaren

Elite Member
Mar 29, 2011
2,597
3
43
Dishonored.
I really wanted to like it. A stealth game, with some fun and cool abilities, and interesting setting, and alright gameplay. The fact that the game didn't autosave at all so I could lose a couple of hours progress if I died at the last second of a mission killed it for me, as did the morality which made me play the hard way just to get the good ending.
 

MrHide-Patten

New member
Jun 10, 2009
1,306
0
0
Bayonetta,I really liked the art direction and the character enough to finish the game, but getting slapped with bronze and silver medals made me feel like I was playing it wrong.

Sortof happening to Lollipop Chainsaw since I bought it, sort of fathoming that fighters don't seem to be my thing.
 

TrulyBritish

New member
Jan 23, 2013
473
0
0
Hmm... reckon I could list a few:
Skyrim- The least problematic on the list, found it kind of fun (after having quite a bit of fun on Oblivion) but I just found it rather dull and colourless after Oblivion. And I have absolutely no interest in the civil war at all, both sides are just idiots. It certainly doesn't help I'm playing on a small monitor which won't let me see my compass, health, magic and stamina while refusing to let me modify screen size.
Fallout 3- Like Skyrim, I just found it dull. Once I found out where Liam Neeson went I tried going straight there and just kept getting eaten by gribblies.
Half Life 2- Now I've played very little of it so it could just be a slow start putting me off and the fact I haven't played the first at all. But again, I'm not seeing why it seems to be such a highly rated game. I'll try getting back to it at some point.
Crysis 2- I blame this one on a lack of story at the beginning. Again, I haven't played the first but would it kill developers to put some kind of brief summary at the beginning? Mass Effect 2 did it after all. So I'm playing through it fighting against men who want to kill me for reasons I'm not sure of, there's aliens I'm just expected to know about and there are characters I'm presumably supposed to know as well. It doesn't help that I don't see any of the enemy troops as an actual threat seeing as you can just go invisible and walk past them quite a bit, so there's no need to kill them. Sure the graphics were kinda nice, but lacking story or any necessary action I just got bored.
 

Sir Pootis

New member
Aug 4, 2012
240
0
0
SpunkeyMonkey said:
Sir Pootis said:
TES3: Morrowind.

snip
You see, to me that's just roleplaying. Getting killed by a bandit because you're not proficient enough at archery yet should be a spur to get better and is perfectly understandable - starting the game as a ninja Robin Hood would kind of make it too easy.

Don't get me wrong, the game's got it's flaws and does take some time to get into. But if you spend some time leveling up through the easy tasks available in Seyda Need, and can bare with the sub-par combat, then you'll find a real quality game in there.

The same as with having to find people - it's old-school RPG-ing that doesn't rely on holding your hand through everything, and for me that's a lot more satisfying and rewarding.
Don't get me wrong, I don't want to have my hand held throughout a game. I only feel that a game should at least give me a chance. When I get slaughtered by the first hostile NPC I find because I wanted to stray from the game's chosen path, i don't feel much opportunity to role-play. The game may get MUCH better later, I'll take your word for it, but I just don't really feel like sitting through the frustration necessary to get to that part.

I also just realized that Chrome's spell-check decided to replace "distance" with "difference".
 

Razentsu

New member
Jun 21, 2011
384
0
0
It's not that I don't like it, but I feel like I'm forcing myself to play Tekken. More specifically, Tekken Tag Tournament 2. I love the Tekken cast and aesthetic, but I mixed feelings about Tekken's gameplay.

Getting hit with strings you've never seen before sucks. It's not terribly difficult to adapt to new strings, but unless the mid/low mixups in a string are clearly telegraphed, you're almost always going to take damage the first time you see it. Also, damage is high in Tekken, so dang, it suuuucks.

I generally like the "crush" concept, but the high damage in Tekken kind of ruins it. It's great that you can read a low and crush it with hop kick, but I don't think you deserve to do 50% damage off a single read. It's as cringe-worthy as DP > FADC > Ultra in SFIV.

I really hope damage is toned down a bit in the next Tekken game. I really want to love Tekken, but Tekken 6 and Tekken Tag Tournament 2 have been very stressful games for me. I've never reached these levels of stress with 2D fighters.
 

Revolutionary

Pub Club Am Broken
May 30, 2009
1,833
0
41
Two Worlds and it's sequel. It was just the RPG I was looking for at the time....Or so I thought.
They had all the makings of exactly what I wanted to play at that exact point in time. The only problem was that they both transpired to rather execrable. Oh well plenty of other RPG's in the sea. Man I love Mount & Blade.
 

FFP2

New member
Dec 24, 2012
741
0
0
MrHide-Patten said:
Bayonetta,I really liked the art direction and the character enough to finish the game, but getting slapped with bronze and silver medals made me feel like I was playing it wrong.
I only got stone medals for most of the game:( Feel so incompetent now...

OT: Bioshock Infinite- The story is really good but my word it has the worst gameplay I've seen in a while. You know you messed up when the first game has better gameplay than the sequel with a $400 million budget.

So this is how Daystar feels when he talks about Spec Ops' gameplay... Except that was supposed to be bland.
 

Wintermute_v1legacy

New member
Mar 16, 2012
1,829
0
0
Right now (as in, I played it yesterday), I'm really really REALLY trying to like this new MMORPG, Age of Wushu. It's Skyrim in China, honestly. Huge, beautiful world, except this world actually feels alive. I was impressed by the sheer amount of NPCs walking around breathing life into the game.

However, I haven't touched an MMO in nearly a decade, so I'm kind of lost. There's so much stuff in the game, so much stuff you can do, so many little details you have to pay attention to. Sadly, I no longer have the free time I once had when I was younger, and this game looks to be really time consuming. You will need lots of time to merely learn the basics.

I actually think it's kind of a shame that this is a MMORPG. It's a world I'd love to get lost in, but I'm afraid it isn't for me.

Trailer below:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UlFjQUAg8Hk
 

KungFuJazzHands

New member
Mar 31, 2013
308
0
0
Skyrim. I suppose I drained myself of any enthusiasm for that one by playing the shit out of Oblivion, and Bethesda's "more of the same" aesthetic didn't appeal to me anymore by the time Skyrim finally came around. I only got 25 hours out of it before I realized my experience wasn't going to improve.

DayZ was another one I tried hard to like, but Arma II's mechanics just never feel right set in a game about a zombie apocalypse. It had so much potential but was completely squandered by poor implementation and lackadaisical design. I'm not expecting the standalone version to be much better, honestly.
 

Mr.Squishy

New member
Apr 14, 2009
1,989
0
0
Dishonored: It looked kinda cool and had some pretty nifty abilities, but the story and characters were bland and predictable as fuck, and that really yanked me out of it. Also, instances of psychic cops.

Borderlands: On the surface, it's perfect - an FPSRPG in a decent setting, with tons of really awesome weapons and four classes. But no, it ended up feeling like a grind, with really unmemorable characters and nothing to call a story. Oh and it really breaks my immersion in any game when I can headshot someone with a sniper rifle, using incendiary rounds, and have them shrug it off like nothing, and then come tear through my shield with a rusty butter knife.
 

Dandark

New member
Sep 2, 2011
1,703
0
0
I tried, I really did but I could not enjoy dishonored. I don't think it's a bad game but I just couldn't get into it myself which bugs me because I really wanted to play it.

EDIT: To add onto that I also really wanted to like Guild Wards 2 but constant lagouts made it unplayable for me. According to support it's all my connection despite me being able to play other games fine including Planetside 2.
 

Pink Apocalypse

New member
Oct 9, 2012
90
0
0
Oblivion: Wow, just....wow.

I fell in love with Skyrim so much that I became interested in wanting to know what came before, so I gave it a try. Between the bizarre, distorted NPC faces in psychedelic orange lighting, the strange, slightly-muffled quality of the sound, the weird way many female NPCs sounded like men imitating women's voices (seriously, I'm convinced that was going on), the male-looking body modeling, the painfully, excruciatingly-slow crawl to be effective...it must be what being on a drug trip is like. I've put about 50 hours into it (forcing myself by the end), and I just can't do it anymore.

The raving, glowing praise, coupled with the aggressive Skyrim slamming, makes me think there's some serious nostalgia-goggles going on, and I really, *really* wanted to like it. Despite this, I'm still a little curious to go further back and try ES3, but I don't know.

Fable 3: Worst let-down of all time for us.

By 'us' I mean my boyfriend and I. We both really liked Fable 2 (and he liked Fable), and were really looking forward to the co-op feature in 3, as well as the game in general. Whoever thought it would be a brilliant idea to remove menus entirely, and force you to go through a series of physical rooms to make even the most trivial of changes to your character, should never be allowed near a game again. The character mechanic gets into its own way so profoundly that it's spoiled the game as a whole for us.

And that's not mentioning the game-breaking bugs. We didn't even get through the first main quest-mission before several glitches broke the game, forcing us to start over. Overall, just awful. It's a text-book example of DON'T TRY TO BE OVERLY CLEVER AND REINVENT THE WHEEL.