I think he missed a perfect opportunity for a "Sperm Whale" joke there...Geisterkarle said:I could have stopped the video at "Free Willy" and I would have been satisfied!![]()
Which is why two years later, Bungie released a game with no multiplayer component and 343 put most of the development dollars into their campaign for Halo 4??Devin Barker said:Haven't played any Halo game since 3. It became very clear to me they they just wanted to cash in on bros and multiplayer and the story was going to be a side note that someone slapped together over a weekend.
I thought it was balanced pretty good, I only have maybe 20 hours in the multiplayer and you get a pack a game pretty much (commendations levelups or buy one) I only buy the 10k packs whenever I find I have enough and I am still drowning in weapons and tanks.(seriously I have about 30 wraith and sword wraith and probably 200 powerweapons) Even doing warzone and using a req every life I'm still getting them faster than I can spend them.An Ceannaire said:Also, I know it has been said countless times already, but the very fact that people keep defending it means that it needs to be reiterated: The REQ system is a pile of cash-grabbing shite and 343i deserve a slow, painful death for even dreaming of implementing it.
While this certainly may be true, Angry Joe did the math and it would take something like 600+ hours in order to unlock everything in the game. The point being that these "microtransactions" are using the mobile microtransaction model: insert a massive grind mechanic into the game and then have the option for people to pay in order to reduce said grinding.Flame Sama said:As a Halo fan, I mostly agree with this review, but the microtransaction REQ packs can be purchased by playing the game. Saying people are using their credit cards to win in a kneejerk reaction to them being in the game. You can unlock every weapon without playing extra money.
They have that.RJ 17 said:While this certainly may be true, Angry Joe did the math and it would take something like 600+ hours in order to unlock everything in the game. The point being that these "microtransactions" are using the mobile microtransaction model: insert a massive grind mechanic into the game and then have the option for people to pay in order to reduce said grinding.Flame Sama said:As a Halo fan, I mostly agree with this review, but the microtransaction REQ packs can be purchased by playing the game. Saying people are using their credit cards to win in a kneejerk reaction to them being in the game. You can unlock every weapon without playing extra money.
How about they...you know...just not have the grind in the first place?
L377UC3 said:I absolutely knew Yahtzee would say something about that opening cinematic. The best parts of the game are uninteractive cutscenes - not the first time in Halo history - but this game pulls this card more than usual. The Campaign demonstrable tat, which is weird considering how people *generally* liked Halo 4's story, if not the gameplay. If anything, Halo 5 has all of the exact opposite problems as Halo 4, which makes it slightly more attractive to me, I suppose. Better than the last 5 years of Halo, but will pale in comparison to CE and 2.
HOWEVER.
The REQ system hasn't actually altered anything on the gameplay end. Nor has it really screwed over customers, to my knowledge. The in-game currency one can buy REQ packs with is piss easy to obtain: a few games in their Warzone playlist a piece. At best they provide cosmetic rewards for all gametypes, or weaponry and vehicles one can only access in Warzone. My only complaint is that unlocking armor pieces has been obsoleted by this system, but that's a problem with the implementation, not the idea itself. It's pricey and random, undoubtedly, but also entirely optional and stupidly easy to get for free. Unless it's the nebulous idea of Microtransactions in full price games that annoys people (the principle of the thing!) I don't see how this is really all that bad. I've had worse experiences with World of Tanks.
It also will supposedly allow for free DLC map packs in the coming years, which are an even bigger problem than Microtransactions, imo. 343 have also said that 50% of the money will go to the HCS prize pool, where Pro teams will compete for $1Million. Then again, 343 have said a lot of things, but if its just the concept that grinds your gears, this should nullify those qualms.Which is why two years later, Bungie released a game with no multiplayer component and 343 put most of the development dollars into their campaign for Halo 4??Devin Barker said:Haven't played any Halo game since 3. It became very clear to me they they just wanted to cash in on bros and multiplayer and the story was going to be a side note that someone slapped together over a weekend.
One of my favorite parts of 3 and reach was customizing my spartan to be what I wanted to look like, and both essentially let me plan out what I needed to do to get how I wanted to look, whether it was challenges to perform, or creds to save and ranks to aim for.L377UC3 said:The REQ system hasn't actually altered anything on the gameplay end. Nor has it really screwed over customers, to my knowledge. The in-game currency one can buy REQ packs with is piss easy to obtain: a few games in their Warzone playlist a piece. At best they provide cosmetic rewards for all gametypes, or weaponry and vehicles one can only access in Warzone. My only complaint is that unlocking armor pieces has been obsoleted by this system, but that's a problem with the implementation, not the idea itself. It's pricey and random, undoubtedly, but also entirely optional and stupidly easy to get for free.
Who brought up Destiny? I was talking about Halo 3:ODST, a game released two years after Halo 3 but without a unique multiplayer of any description. It's just a story campaign.Devin Barker said:Destiny has multiplayer. Its not VS but it is multiplayer. The development money may have been spent on the campaign... but did it result in anything meaningful? Did the story blow you away? Did it captivate you and make you NEED to play the 5th game? Im not saying every game needs to be amazeballs but the stories feel like generic scifi stuffing wrapped in Halo skin (or at least 3 did, like I said I have not played any of the newer ones) 1 pulled me in, I was actually interested in what was happening and wanted more, 2 less so but still came back for 3... after that mess... I was out... the story had nothing to it. This is more the point im making, Money does not = good game. Im glad folks like the multiplayer and that some folks are happy with the campaign. Im not telling you what to play, Im just not throwing down my cash for a game where the plot (IMO) is coming second to everything else in the game
Oh certainly.Windknight said:One of my favorite parts of 3 and reach was customizing my spartan to be what I wanted to look like, and both essentially let me plan out what I needed to do to get how I wanted to look, whether it was challenges to perform, or creds to save and ranks to aim for.L377UC3 said:The REQ system hasn't actually altered anything on the gameplay end. Nor has it really screwed over customers, to my knowledge. The in-game currency one can buy REQ packs with is piss easy to obtain: a few games in their Warzone playlist a piece. At best they provide cosmetic rewards for all gametypes, or weaponry and vehicles one can only access in Warzone. My only complaint is that unlocking armor pieces has been obsoleted by this system, but that's a problem with the implementation, not the idea itself. It's pricey and random, undoubtedly, but also entirely optional and stupidly easy to get for free.
You can't do that with the REQ packs. You can decide what customization you want, but you cant plan out how you get it. You just buy a diceroll, and hope you get lucky. And you buy more dice rolls, and maybe you get lucky, and maybe you get frustrated, and are tempted to buy more dicerolls with real money to get what you want.
This is precisely why I dropped the ME3 multiplayer once it ceased being a factor in my singleplayer run/I had all achievements tied to it.