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Onyx Oblivion

Borderlands Addict. Again.
Sep 9, 2008
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s69-5 said:
Onyx Oblivion said:
-Play Normal or Hard first run.

-Only play Easy when replaying levels for missed items or achievements or trophies. (Beat Vanquish without dying, for example)

-Never try and achieve 100% completion on JRPGs anymore. It's a thankless task, and takes ages. *glares at Disgaea games*
Through the magic of HDMI to DVI I've been playing Agarest: Generations of War.

Forget 100% completion, this game is HUGE! I'm only in the second generation and have been playing pretty solidly for a week...
Shame. I know how much you love your 100% completion and Plats, too.
 

LightningBanks

New member
Apr 15, 2009
789
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1) Although dont rush the game, act fast, before it bores me (I get easily bored)
2) If the game doesent bore you, TAKE IT ALL. ALLL I SAYYY
3) Try to play singleplayer when you have about 4 hours or so, the constant restarts bore me easily.
 

TelHybrid

New member
May 16, 2009
1,785
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- Never play on easy. It makes it that much more shameful if I fail...

- Never join public voice chat on a Call of Duty game online, or generally most Xbox LIVE games. My ears are not a toilet.

- If a game has an online mode and a single player campaign, try to finish the single player campaign first before jumping into online. If the maps used for online are campaign maps, then it's kind of a spoiler and ruins the atmosphere.

- Never rename my characters in JRPGs if there is a default name.

- After beating a game of one genre, play a game of a different genre next. Keep it fresh, never play a sequel right after playing the game that preceded it either.

- When playing online, try to make sure it's with IRL friends too.

- Never buy a game second hand when it's not long been released. Seriously, what kind of prick buys (for example) Call of Duty Black Ops for £37 used when it's around £40 new? Way to support the industry guys.
 

ArchAngelKira

New member
Mar 25, 2010
455
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My standards
1.Make sure its licensed from another countries gaming company
2.Look for familier company I know of
3.Look at X-play reviews (Then add on 1 star if I liked the game)
4.Check if its and RPG
5.Buy it
 

Continuity

New member
May 20, 2010
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- Normal first, adjust up after first play though, down if difficulty is putting me off the game.

- Try to finish a game at least once... unfortunately I don't often stick to this, most games I've played I don't finish.

- only refer to a walk-through if I'm properly stuck for at least an hour.

- Write a review, this is something I always intend to do but often don't take the time, I post user reviews on gamespot.

- This is a new rule that I've made in the last few months but I think its an important one: Never buy a big release before a complete edition is on sale! for example Dragon age origins, if you bought that on release then paid for the expansion and all the DLC the game would cost you several times that amount you can get the "ultimate" edition for now. I'm applying this rule to Fallout new vegas - i'm not touching it until all DLC, patchs, and expansions are release and bundled in an "ultimate" edition... damn publishers ripping us off.. grrr.
 

Srdjan

New member
Mar 12, 2010
692
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In RPG, look to the every corner, find everything, and if game lets me kill all or almost all NPCs. Needless to say I end up being bad.
 

UltraDeth

New member
Nov 2, 2010
14,150
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I always play on the easy mode first for a trial
I like to put all sound options up to maximum
I always work for a good Karma
Complete some of the easier challenges/achievments first
I like to put subtitles on (I also do this for movies)
 

Shock and Awe

Winter is Coming
Sep 6, 2008
4,645
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Always play through single player at least a little bit before I try multiplayer. Not much beyond that.
 

veloper

New member
Jan 20, 2009
4,596
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1 Never play on easy modes.

2 Figure out how the game works (winning strategies).

3 Don't worry about 100% completion. The real enjoyment is in #2.
 

Bourne Endeavor

New member
May 14, 2008
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Onyx Oblivion said:
DO NOT REPLAY ANY RPGS!

You people already on your 4th New Vegas character or 20th Mass Effect 2 playthrough or 32nd Persona 4 run...YOU ALL DISGUST ME!

I have a lot of RPGs that I own and are untouched, and I'm not playing a 30-60 hour game TWICE.
... hah, my list would horrify you. If I fancy a game, it is nigh mandatory I play it twice. This has of course led to some... ridiculous hours logged on the same game. Hell as of this moment I am replaying Mass Effect for the sixth time (and yes I do everything.) The kicker? I finished my fifth file a little over a week ago, if that. Then there is Lunar and FFX... those games I have spent way too many hours on.

Anyhow, my list.

- Always play on Normal or higher.
- Have the strategy guide handy
- If there is a morality system, play Renegon (75% Evil, 25% Good)
- If the game has a custom creation system. I will spend the next several (potentially days) on it.
- Play for more than an hour in the initial sitting, otherwise I restart.
- Always keep on Subtitles
- Hyperactive or bubbly character will probably be in my party
- Likewise, badass characters will probably find their way in too
- Female characters are always in the middle of any of my three person party
- Speed > Power and I shall develop my characters as such (Usually means Rogue first)
- Usually will play female if given the option
- Replay Lunar Silver Star Story Complete at least once a year. (Twenty four and counting)
 

badgersprite

[--SYSTEM ERROR--]
Sep 22, 2009
3,820
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My first playthrough is always blind, and based on what feels natural to me. I don't get any advice on what I'm supposed to do. I don't even check the achievements, and I don't find out what affects my morality. This can lead to me missing major missions entirely in games like Fallout 3 (I didn't find the Ant-Agonizer or Harold on my first runthrough) or being put in situations like in Mass Effect 1 where I didn't have enough Charm or Intimidate points to resolve a pretty tense situation in the ideal way. Or, on my first playthrough of Dragon Age: Origins, I didn't realise Wynne was a recruitable character, and I had Morrigan in my party, so I killed Wynne. =(

After that, I go back and try to do a perfect run. Maxing out my 'karma', completing all the missions and assignments I can, attaining the highest level, getting the best (or, playing evil, maybe the worst) possible result in every mission, and I go achievement hunting for fun, and picking an ideal character build. Yes, I'm obsessive about my stats.
 

thejboy88

New member
Aug 29, 2010
1,515
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-Engaging story
-No serious plot holes
-Good voice acting
-Good control scheme
-Impressive art design
-Lost of little "extras" for doign things in the games (e.g. commentaries, deleted scenes, "making of" videos etc)
-No over-the-top violence or sexuality, just to keep the censors and protesters at bay
-Believable and likaple main protagonists
-Believable and compelling antagonists (not out-and-out "muahaha" villains)
-Reasonable Length (24 hours maybe)
-Replay value (e.g. choice systems with alternate endings and storylines)
-Beautiful and "tear-jerking" soundtrack
-No stereotypical female or racial characters (playable or otherwise).
-"Epic" boss fights
 

Eclectic Dreck

New member
Sep 3, 2008
6,660
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I don't really have "standards" but there are things I do often enough that they might as well count.

Unless I know that I will want a greater challenge, I always play a game on the default difficulty. Halo is an example of an exception as I will always play first on Heroic.

My first playthough is honest.

When given the opportunity to make decisions, I do so as though I was present in the world. In most games this equates to picking the "good" choice as the "evil" choice is rarely a sound move.

I do not really care about achievements. If one is "on the way" I will probably deviate to get it. In CoD 3 for example, because I left the game on the default difficulty (and it was painfully easy) I went for the level specific achievements like completing a certain mission using only melee and grenades or finishing another level using only salvaged German weaponry.
 

Merkavar

New member
Aug 21, 2010
2,426
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my standards are toplay on normal first time. hard always seems too hard. easy seems too easy.

normally make choices in game based on what id do in real life. except if it involves a heard of animals such as rhinos or deer. i will kill the adults and leave the babies to wander the plains, starving to death :)
 

Toriver

Lvl 20 Hedgehog Wizard
Jan 25, 2010
1,364
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1. Play through Normal before touching any other difficulties.
2. Like Yahtzee, I believe that a game should be able to stand alone on its single-player merit, though if multiplayer is also exceptional, hey, that's a plus.
3. Unlock all unlockable game content. I don't have to be a total completionist and get 100% of everything, but I should at least earn all the stuff I can play with.
4. In games that offer such options, try at least one unconventional party combination, equipment setup, fighting game character, etc. and learn to use it effectively. They're available for a reason, why not see why? It also adds more challenge and depth to the game, IMO, and it's also something to show off some skill to my other gamer friends!