It's not a single player game. Yahztee just refuses to play online games and forgets to mention this fact. The game is primarily designed around 4 player online cooperative boss fight missions against huge dragons and what not.Waif said:I like to play MMO's, and I don't mind the grinding aspects. Though part of what makes the grinding in MMO's fun are the friends you play with. It benefits them as well as yourself, and the adventure doesn't have to necessarily end. Great video all the same ^~^!
After seeing those videos, all of yahtzee's complaints seem minimal or when compared to the question "Are there any decently fast weapons?"vagabondRaiser said:I made an account to say but one thing:
Watch the videos online. Yahtzee played approximately 1.5% of the game (of which the average player puts about 200-400 hours of time in, and no, it's not all hunting mushrooms). The 'gigantic fucking sea monster' shows up to scare the piss out of you so as to encourage you to get better so you can actually fight the damn thing. Look up the following Youtube videos:
Monster Hunter Tri~ Barroth by Yomoska
Monster Hunter Tri~ Royal Ludroth by Yomoska
Monster Hunter Tri~ Lagiacrus (repel) by Yomoska
Monster Hunter Tri Online - Rathalos [HD] by earvcunanan
These are just a few. The game is called 'Monster Hunter' for a pretty good reason. I had a hunch Yahtzee wouldn't give the game a good review, because it's not a game you can get 'into' without actually reading the in-game information material. (For instance, had he read the information in the game, he would've known that you can tell if something larger than your weapon will show up is indicated directly underneath the mission details. The exception was that mission with Lagiacrus (the sea monster), because it's been tradition in every game for them to sneak something ridiculously out of your league in the first few low level missions since the first Monster Hunter on the ps2. They did it with Rathalos in the first game, Tigrex in the second, and Lagiacrus in the third.)
There's a good reason professional reviews of Monster Hunter games turn out low scores whilst 'unprofessional' gamer reviews turn out higher ones. One group isn't being paid to grind through a game each week.
This game isn't technically the third in the series, however, when you consider:
1) Monster Hunter and the expansion, Monster Hunter G
2) Monster Hunter 2
3) Monster Hunter Portable (and Portable G) (Freedom in the US, G wasn't localized)
4) Monster Hunter Portable 2 (and 2nd G) (Freedom 2 and Freedom Unite in the US, respectively)
5) Monster Hunter Tri (this one)
And since there's already word of the rest, let's not forget:
6) Monster Hunter Portable 3 (which is a port of Tri for the PSP)
7) Monster Hunter Frontier Online (an Xbox 360 online version).
Yeah, totally unpopular game that has nothing going for it! *thumbsup*
Does this mean the wii finally works online without being laggy as all hell?KelsieKatt said:It's not a single player game. Yahztee just refuses to play online games and forgets to mention this fact. The game is primarily designed around 4 player online cooperative boss fight missions against huge dragons and what not.Waif said:I like to play MMO's, and I don't mind the grinding aspects. Though part of what makes the grinding in MMO's fun are the friends you play with. It benefits them as well as yourself, and the adventure doesn't have to necessarily end. Great video all the same ^~^!
Wow, it seems like all the worst parts of the game will be revealed by people trying to defend it.The tutorial introduces you to the most basic mechanics and tries to ease you into them very slowly so you don't get confused,
Yup, judging by the people defending this game, the complaints about it being a boring grindfest will no longer even be noticeable.AdamG3691 said:yahtzee, everyone seems to have noticed that you didn't play anything after the tutorial, why dont you try for a bit longer, and then actually post on this thread, preferably with some ACTUAL REASONS.
I've never had any issues on Monster Hunter 3, so I would say so.mike1921 said:Does this mean the wii finally works online without being laggy as all hell?
Well, it's not exactly a simple game by any means. The first Monster Hunter game on PS2 pretty much dropped you straight into fighting stuff with little explanation and people got really upset because they had no idea what they were doing.mike1921 said:Wow, it seems like all the worst parts of the game will be revealed by people trying to defend it.
So, it has an hour long tutorial? Since when is that "fairly slow"? That's unimaginably slow. And I'm assuming you only saying you could ignore it and jump into online play or the arena mode means you can't just skip it and do the other single player parts?KelsieKatt said:Well, it's not exactly a simple game by any means. The first Monster Hunter game on PS2 pretty much dropped you straight into fighting stuff with little explanation and people got really upset because they had no idea what they were doing.mike1921 said:Wow, it seems like all the worst parts of the game will be revealed by people trying to defend it.
As a result, Capcom made a fairly slow paced tutorial in order to ease people into how the game functions this time around. Which has resulted in people complaining that they're bored.
In the end though, if you can get past that, or for that matter, you could simply ignore it and just jump into online play right off the bat, or arena mode, it's a very different game than the initial impression it gives after the first hour or so.
Unfortunately no, you can't. Which I would agree is annoying as fuck, considering that I've been playing the series since the first game so I already know what I'm doing, which is extremely tedious if I just want to kill stuff. >_<mike1921 said:So, it has an hour long tutorial? Since when is that "fairly slow"? That's unimaginably slow. And I'm assuming you only saying you could ignore it and jump into online play or the arena mode means you can't just skip it and do the other single player parts?
If the tutorial lasts significantly longer than oblivion's, and I can't skip it, and the tutorial itself isn't fun, for me that's enough of a reason not to even consider renting a game.KelsieKatt said:Unfortunately no, you can't. Which I would agree is annoying as fuck, considering that I've been playing the series since the first game so I already know what I'm doing, which is extremely tedious if I just want to kill stuff. >_<mike1921 said:So, it has an hour long tutorial? Since when is that "fairly slow"? That's unimaginably slow. And I'm assuming you only saying you could ignore it and jump into online play or the arena mode means you can't just skip it and do the other single player parts?
Judging by yahtzee's opinion of the game (or you say the tutorial), it was a bad idea whether you know what you're doing or not.It would be nice if they would remember these kinds of things when trying to dumb stuff down for casual players, as there should be an option to skip past the entire segment if you already know what you're doing. -_-
Well, I can't exactly blame you for feeling that way, although, in the end I still personally feel the other dozens and dozens of hours worth of gameplay is worthwhile in the end.mike1921 said:If the tutorial lasts significantly longer than oblivion's, and I can't skip it, and the tutorial itself isn't fun, for me that's enough of a reason not to even consider renting a game.
CAPS LOCK! PAY ATTENTION TO ME!Gypsyhatten said:I AM A SERIOUS REVIEWER
I MAKE MONEY OFF OF PLAYING A GAME FOR AN HOUR, THEN JUDGE THE ENTIRE GAME FROM THIS EXPERICENCE
WATCH ME ROAR
RAAAH
Well, the part in particular that he mentioned about the sea serpent boss, wasn't actually a boss mission. It's part of the tutorial in which they have that enemy appear and the instructor tells you "Oh crap. It's the sea monster that destroyed the village. Run for your life." Which is exactly what you do, as you're not supposed to fight it because it's much too powerful for that to even be possible at the time.Sketches said:But, the compaining seems like the hate mail he got from SSB Brawl.
He's good at gaming, he likes to complain about things, and he mentioned about the monster that of course it was too hard for him to beat, but he wasn't exactly pissing himself about it. (Literaly) <-- That was in response to the first comment I saw, page 13 or something.
But anyway, nice video, as always.
That does make sense. But alot of people would wait there for a while, and play the game wondering what the hell happened to continuiety now-a-daysKelsieKatt said:Well, the part in particular that he mentioned about the sea serpent boss, wasn't actually a boss mission. It's part of the tutorial in which they have that enemy appear and the instructor tells you "Oh crap. It's the sea monster that destroyed the village. Run for your life."Sketches said:Snip
That's about it. The reason why it never showed up again while he was standing by the water, was that was only for demonstration purposes, and you don't actually bump into it in any other mission until much later in the game.