I second this motionmeatloaf231 said:Changing disks is about the most immersion-shattering thing you can do.
i third that motion.meatloaf231 said:Changing disks is about the most immersion-shattering thing you can do.
How so? Unless you're a freak who won't stop playing a video game for a second until finishing it, it's about the same as turning the console off; not immersion-breaking, just necessary.meatloaf231 said:Changing disks is about the most immersion-shattering thing you can do.
Yeah, like at the end of a certain amount of chapters in a game or something.Hunde Des Krieg said:Me either. I don't mind at all, as long as they do it at a point where it is appropriate.ellimist337 said:I don't think I've ever really heard hate for them, but I'm not really in the loop on a lot of PC gaming, so I don't know. I have Fable: Lost Chapters and Morrowind for PC; the multi-disk setup never bothered me.
Yes - you'd have to have the disc you want to play in the 360 to verify you own it.CountFenring said:If you install both disks to the 360 HDD, would you still have to switch disks?
A lot of PS1 games were multi-disc, the Final Fantasy series being key culprits. Although nowadays, as the storage medium gets larger the likelihood of multi-disc games is much lower. Although I believe Lost Odyssey had a second disc too.KaZZaP said:Are there even any multi disk console games out there? I sure haven't seen any.
Yes, but often the disk changes come in the middle of plot-intensive parts of the game, and having "Insert disk 2" flash on the screen is about as blunt as just saying "Hey. You're playing a video game. Stop caring about the narrative or the characters."Russian Redneck said:How so? Unless you're a freak who won't stop playing a video game for a second until finishing it, it's about the same as turning the console off; not immersion-breaking, just necessary.meatloaf231 said:Changing disks is about the most immersion-shattering thing you can do.