endtherapture said:
I feel like I should just stop watching as soon as he said he hasn't played the games because if you haven't played or experienced the full journey, you have no idea how bad the ending is.
You can't comment on an issue on the internet properly if you haven't experienced it.
EDIT: Yeah he has no idea what he is going on about, saying by interacting with a medium, the story is of a worse quality than if you'd read it in a book/seen it in a film? Yeah. He is completely wrong.
EDIT2: He just called us all entitled. All gamers he called entitled. Being dissatisfied with a product =/= entitlement. Someone really needs to get this into thick idiot's skulls.
EDIT3: Bioware do owe the fans something. Their fans are their business. They have no fans = they sell no products. Bioware owe their livelihoods to fans, and the fans have been cheated out of a decent ending. Expect the next Bioware game to sell very poorly.
EDIT4: He needs to stop saying entitlement here. Gamers aren't entitled. They pay for their products. Maybe it's different for him and other critics cos they get free games/movies/etc. to review and stuff, but when you've spent £30 of your cash on a game, and it is overall shit, and you say it, you're not entitled.
EDIT5: I don't care if games are taken seriously. See Jimquisition on this. Most of the music I listen to (metalcore/hardcore/pop punk) isn't considered art by most people but I really don't give a shit. I like it, that's all that matters, I don't give a shit if some critic doesn't consider it art.
EDIT6: He just said we're entitled to ask for patches to fix "real problems". That is not entitlement. This dick has no idea what he's going on about.
Okay. I'll respond point by point, since obviously you won't understand any other way.
EDIT1: He's not saying that interacting with a medium, while certainly more interesting for the player, is rather difficult on the writer. It's much easier to write a non-interactive medium, since you can do things like having the narrator provide exposition, have characters give their internal thoughts without some convoluted dream sequence, et al. More importantly, as this demonstrates, one of the benefits of completing a book or a movie and getting it to print (on film or paper) is that it's DONE. People may not like it, but nobody calls Stanley Kubrick or J.K. Rowling after it's done and say...could you patch in an ending where Dumbledore doesn't die?? Books and movies don't need tutorial levels. They don't have to try to cater to really stupid people if they don't want to. When games have tried this - such as Dark Souls/Demon Souls, generally fans don't like them.
If you'd like a direct comparison, go grab one of those awful R.A. Montgomery Choose Your Own Adventure novels.
EDIT2: Yeah, you are entitled. Wanted something different =/= entitled. DEMANDING IT == entitled. Attempting to use Child's Play == ENTITLED. Insulting the writers == ENTITLED. FTC Complaint == Beyond Thunderdome ENTITLED. Lawsuit Threats == Off The Scale ENTITLED. Calling someone a "dick" repeatedly because he disagrees with you == ENTITLED.
EDIT3: Bioware owes you nothing. You give them money, they give you game. End of transaction. They might want to do it on a appreciating the fan level, but they didn't give you a broken game. They didn't even give you a game you disliked entirely. They gave you a game that you played for somewhere between 3600 and 6000 (or more) minutes and you didn't like ten of them. More importantly, other people liked the ending. I like it. Not totally, but I definitely get the idea and I definitely like what they did. Even if I hated the ending, between single player and multiplayer, I've logged..170+ hours in ME3. At some point, your complaints go beyond the pale.
EDIT4: The "Retake Mass Effect" people are entitled (they tried to hide their entitlement through charity, which is even more ridiculous_. You're acting very entitled. You paid money. You got a game. They didn't cheat you. The game's not broken. You may not like it, but that's certainly not cause to demand they fix it. You can respond with complaints. You can ask for your money back. Some people did get their money back. That's it. The game's not broken. More importantly,
I think it's rather entitled to enjoy all this work - some of the best writers, voice actors, game designs, mocap artists, and animators in the industry worked on this game. There are points in this game that are just amazing. I've felt less for the death of real people then I did for the deaths of Mordin and Legion. Saving the Krogan and getting their responses of joy is tremendous. Hearing the bitterness in Garrus's voice as he stares at the burning embers of Palavan is amazing. There is quality in so many details of this game. The little details are amazing - I remember talking to the engineers in the ship and having them remember the power converters I fetched them in ME2. There's humor, there's terrible sadness, there's tragedy, there's some amazing gameplay from time to time. You got a LOT for your money.
EDIT5: You may not, but people in the industry do. Not every game is the best ever, but when they work on something like ME3 (or any other triple-A title), they want it to be their best work. Casey Hudson wanted this game to blow people's minds. Mac Walters - the same. Ray Muzyka - the same. They want their work to be realized, want people to love and appreciate it, and they're even willing to throw their integrity into the fire to make you guys happy. You don't deserve any of it, but they're probably going to do it anyway. You've treated their art like utter crap, and just because they want you to be happy, they're going to try and fix it for you. It says a lot about them, and just how rotten people like you are.
EDIT6: You're misquoting him. What he said was "[gamers say] they're entitled to patches and DLC not just to fix real problems, but to reshape the designer's original vision to more closely match our own. How the hell can we insist the broader culture take games seriously when we won't take them seriously?" One is proper (fixing a broken thing) and the other is entitlement (I don't like this! Mommy, get me something else!).
What's funny is that calling gamers entitled makes them get up in arms, but gamers can brutally insult Patricia Helfer with homophobic and sexist slurs and nobody bothers to look around and see how wrong that was.