Posted June 05, 2013
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keeveek
NOPE
Registered: Dec 2009
From Poland
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Fenixp
nnpab
Registered: Sep 2008
From Czech Republic
Posted June 05, 2013
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'Role-playing refers to the changing of one's behaviour to assume a role, either unconsciously to fill a social role, or consciously to act out an adopted role.' but that is doing your thing in more words. Role-playing is not how the world reacts, that's just how well are your choices implemented into the world. And don't pull 'Oh we all have our own definitions of roleplaiyng', that's bullshit - that word is actually defined quite well.
Your argument is that reactions of the world are not implemented all that well, and I agree wholeheartedly with this statement. It's just what TES games do. You don't like it, that's fine, but as I said it's incredibly easy to piss on those games for doing so - it's much harder to look at it from eyes of someone who enjoys them. So... Just stop from a minute and try to see the problem from a perspective of a person who enjoys those games.
I'll try to elaborate on a different quote of yours:
In Mass Effect, you can only be a warrior fighting evil in space. In Witcher games, you can only be a monster slayer. In Fallout games, you will inevitably end up being a wasteland warrior, either by your own merits, or as a leader of a group. In those games, you have variations on how do you choose to fulfill that role, but you always inevitably end up fulfilling that role - if you don't, all of those games will keep reminding you that you're playing them wrong.
TES games take up a completely different approach. Yeah, world never really reacts to your decisions. Yeah, individual choices of what you can be are all but shallow. But you can be anything you want, absolutely anything. You can be thief who only ever kills who he needs to - it can be done, you will level up properly, and you can keep your kill count very low. You can't do that efficiently in, say, Fallout, as kills are what gives you most experience. As for your character, you can be a pure thief who only kills when necessary, and accepts his quests accordingly. You can do that. You can be a summoner, who never gets in a direct battle and doesn't like to align himself with anyone. These games can even be played as completely peaceful, non-combat characters - I've done so once, it was definitely an interesting experience, and most importantly, I have never felt like I'm playing the game 'wrong'.
So yes, TES games give you a lot of options, and all of them are very shallow - but all of them are also viable.
Now, when Bethseda made TES games, they very well realized there's just no way in hell they're ever going to fulfill roleplaying needs of every single player, that's why those games can be modified so heavily. This way, you can tailor TES games to be almost anything you want them to be. Heavily modified Oblivion was one of my best gaming experiences, precisely because it was a game I wanted it to be. Bethseda gave me a high-quality base game, and I have made it perfect.
And that's precisely what TES games are all about. Choice. Yes, game world won't react much to the choices you make. That's fine, I can have fun roleplaying whatever I want even without that. If you can't, well... That's sad. But TES games are the only games which ever allowed me to do that this much, and it's not a design flaw, it's a design choice by Bethseda. Weren't you talking about artistic integrity at some point?
Post edited June 05, 2013 by Fenixp
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keeveek
NOPE
Registered: Dec 2009
From Poland
Posted June 05, 2013
I know what you're saying, but it's not really that true for Fallout 2. You don't need to save your village. You may entirely piss on them and still play the game.
What is superior than it is in Oblivion? IF you piss on your home village, they all die. They die, that's your price for being a dick.
In Oblivion, if you decide to piss on a main quest, that's fine. Nothing happens. The world stays frozen, awaiting for you to take action. Even though they tell you the world is about to die any minute, it won't.
What I would like to see in Oblivion, it's not forcing you to take action. But to show you the consequence. For example, you piss on main quest - the more portals are opening, the demons are attacking the villages, you would see people being slaughtered by demons on your way. You could still piss on the main quest, but you would see the consequence.
Fallout 2 >>>>> Oblivion
by the way, you can sneak and talk your way out from most things in Fallout 2 too. You don't get as much experience, but if you do it right, you don't really need to.
Remember one of the very first quests in the game, to free Vic? You may fight and kill them all of course. But if your character isn't much of a fighter but has good looks - that's fine, you may fuck your way out of this mess.
What is superior than it is in Oblivion? IF you piss on your home village, they all die. They die, that's your price for being a dick.
In Oblivion, if you decide to piss on a main quest, that's fine. Nothing happens. The world stays frozen, awaiting for you to take action. Even though they tell you the world is about to die any minute, it won't.
What I would like to see in Oblivion, it's not forcing you to take action. But to show you the consequence. For example, you piss on main quest - the more portals are opening, the demons are attacking the villages, you would see people being slaughtered by demons on your way. You could still piss on the main quest, but you would see the consequence.
Fallout 2 >>>>> Oblivion
by the way, you can sneak and talk your way out from most things in Fallout 2 too. You don't get as much experience, but if you do it right, you don't really need to.
Remember one of the very first quests in the game, to free Vic? You may fight and kill them all of course. But if your character isn't much of a fighter but has good looks - that's fine, you may fuck your way out of this mess.
Post edited June 05, 2013 by keeveek
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Buenro-games
GOGInclusionist
Registered: May 2012
From Germany
Posted June 05, 2013
Yeah. It freaks me out when the other Tom Cruise shows up at the cabin for the newly discovered girl because I couldn't help thinking what happened to the other girl she was already with. It's not as if the other one got shot.
Wait, are we talking about the same Oblivion?
Wait, are we talking about the same Oblivion?
user deleted
New User
Registered: Jul 2011
From United States
Posted June 05, 2013
IMHO, Divinity 2 is more of the same, but on a much newer graphics/physics engine, but it gets flaky once you take dragon form. Still a great game, but I prefer the other 2 better... but I also like Oblivion, so take that with a grain of salt :p
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Fenixp
nnpab
Registered: Sep 2008
From Czech Republic
Posted June 05, 2013
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Not so in TES games. In TES games, you set your own set of goals. My goal in the last game of TES that I was playing was to buy a house, and I was able to do so without completing a single quest and fighting a single battle. When I got that house, I've actually had quite a high level of my character, a lot of points in sneak, illusion and alchemy. You can do similar things in Fallout, but it's blindingly obvious that the game was not designed to accomodate that.
Post edited June 05, 2013 by Fenixp
user deleted
New User
Registered: Jul 2011
From United States
Posted June 05, 2013
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keeveek
NOPE
Registered: Dec 2009
From Poland
Posted June 05, 2013
I think we need to agree to disagree then :P
What seems to be universally true for TES games, though, everyone can find something for himself in them.
For me, it's exploring caves more than anything else. Even though I really dislike how shallow the game world can be, I really, really enjoy the crawling. Especially with my Agent class, where I sneak, snipe skeletons with my uber-bow and loot the treasure.
What I also really, really like, it's you can steal everything in this game. In most RPG games you can't steal some things, especially from shopkeepers, because then you would get too good stuff too early in game.
But in Oblivion my thief/agent can steal everything. To the point I don't really remember I bought anything recently. :D I use my money only for training.
And I like that a lot as well, even though I dislike a large portion of the game.
by the way, I spent a lot of time in Fallout 2 being a junkie once. I wanted to see how it's like :D It was "super fun", I had to sell my clothes and weapons to buy new dope, I had very bad detox few times, I had to steal from people to be able to buy new fix for myself.
Good times.
What seems to be universally true for TES games, though, everyone can find something for himself in them.
For me, it's exploring caves more than anything else. Even though I really dislike how shallow the game world can be, I really, really enjoy the crawling. Especially with my Agent class, where I sneak, snipe skeletons with my uber-bow and loot the treasure.
What I also really, really like, it's you can steal everything in this game. In most RPG games you can't steal some things, especially from shopkeepers, because then you would get too good stuff too early in game.
But in Oblivion my thief/agent can steal everything. To the point I don't really remember I bought anything recently. :D I use my money only for training.
And I like that a lot as well, even though I dislike a large portion of the game.
by the way, I spent a lot of time in Fallout 2 being a junkie once. I wanted to see how it's like :D It was "super fun", I had to sell my clothes and weapons to buy new dope, I had very bad detox few times, I had to steal from people to be able to buy new fix for myself.
Good times.
Post edited June 05, 2013 by keeveek
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Fenixp
nnpab
Registered: Sep 2008
From Czech Republic
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keeveek
NOPE
Registered: Dec 2009
From Poland
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Navagon
Easily Persuaded
Registered: Dec 2008
From United Kingdom
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Siannah
what?
Registered: Sep 2008
From Switzerland
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keeveek
NOPE
Registered: Dec 2009
From Poland
Posted June 05, 2013
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But you can do that. Just because the system allows you to do all and everything, doesn't mean you have to. If you fail to restrict yourself to the role you've chosen, don't blame the system.
This is exactly what some of you don't understand. If my character breaks the rules, it doesn't mean I'm a bad roleplayer. It only means my character is not trustworthy. But the guild doesn't seem to give a slightest of fucks.
Post edited June 05, 2013 by keeveek
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MobiusArcher
Bad at games
Registered: Dec 2008
From United States
Posted June 05, 2013
When you do have an impact on the game world in other games its still just whatever impact the developer wanted. Its all preordained. I really want there to be a game with a truly dynamic world that isn't scripted. That would be a true role playing game. Not just some game where you play the role(s) that the developers let you play.
A man can dream...
A man can dream...
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TwisterBE
Daydreamer
Registered: Oct 2012
From Belgium
Posted June 05, 2013
This video might interest you. It's about the dumbing down of the elder scrolls series. Starts a little slow but definitely worth watching. http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=JweTAhyR4o0#t=411s