All right then, let's do this.Treblaine said:snip
I think that (at least a part of) this disconnect you are discussing/criticising stems from the author´s intention of how the audio diaries are supposed to function in his/her story, and what is actually written in the actual finished product.
In Bioshock the inhabitants of Rapture record thoughts where it is fairly obvious that the writers wanted to get the player thinking in certain ways or about certain things, but on the other hand it doesn't make a lot of sense for the citizens of Rapture to record the sort of information they often do. A specific example that come to mind is an audio diary by Sullivan where he "discusses" with himself (there is admittedly a possibility that it was a message for somebody, but it seems unlikely) the bathysphere lockdown and that you need Ryan´s genetic signature in order to use them of your own accord. Thing is, why did Sullivan decide to record this? We can speculate about this, but it seems fairly random of him to do so. Also, what he talks about can be considered classified information, making you wonder why he is recording it on something that would relatively easy for someone to accidentially overhear it.
The problem arises when the writers doesn't quite think through the presentation of the information given out, but then again (mostly) we don't care to look at hard enough at it anyway, which allows them to get away with it.
This reminded me of Bioshock 2 (PC version), where you had a library that would play all the different audio logs. It also had a nifty feature in that it would provide a transscript of the audio log you chosse to play, thus making relistening to the tape less neccessary if you were just looking for a specific piece of information.Well for one, when the game has terminally boring diary entries and the only reasons you'd listen to them is to get a code, then with a text-diary you can just skim over to find the code. I don't like being coerced to listen and actually pay attention to such dreary exposition just to get a code. Especially when you don't know in which diary entry the code is contained so you have to listen to loads of them and can't speed it up.
This I am going to have to ask you to elaborate on a bit, specifically what you mean by "more natural."Then, of course, it's much more natural for people to write or type down their memoires than make audio recordings.
Generally speaking, no they don't. But that doesn't mean they won't ever do it.And for messages and notes, people don't make tape recordings for messages.
Of course, this is assuming that messages left on phone answering machines (and the like) doesn't count. If they do count, well, I'll let that speak for itself.