Micah Weil said:
No. The market isn't responding to the consumer need anymore. It's more like an angry dictatorship, with people up in their ivory towers shouting down at the lower masses, telling them what they want. Frankly, I think we're past the golden age of video gaming and we're currently in the age where the icons wear their pants down around their knees.
Unique ideas, concepts, modus operandi, what have you have been shoved aside because, truly, we've become a community too scared of innovation. We've missed out on a lot because "OMGHALO!".
I completely disagree. I think games are evolving and we, as a community, are too jaded and self righteous to see and/or appreciate it.
I have mentioned this example in a few other threads, but I love to talk about Left 4 Dead. I bought this game a couple months ago on steam for $25 with a bunch of my buddies to play online. The game is a fresh, fun, new spin on an old fps concept. There has never been an experience of cooperation (or vs match depending on how you like to play) of trying to survive a zombie apocolypse with your friends. My only complaint is that there isn't enough campaigns.
I bought Civilization 4 a few years ago, and even though its a "tired" sequel of a game that came out ALMOST 20 years ago, it still innovates and is still fun for me, even though the game came out a couple years ago.
I loved Assassin's Creed despite the undeserved hate for it. Sure the game got a little repetitive but still it told a FRESH, UNIQUE story we really haven't seen before with excellent controls and a general fun interface.
The Wii has pushed what video games are capable of in general with accessible, casual games that are fun for everyone; not just geeky fanboys like myself and most of the other denizens of the Escapist.
World of Warcraft has completely changed how we view online gaming. Games are now more profitable than almost any other type of artistic medium. That doesn't happen because there are no new, fun games to play.
Saphatorael said:
All I want is that my games are fun and worth the money. Sadly, I'm seeing a decline in the fun/price ratio. So hrm.
Heh, see my above comments on L4D or Civ4. I've gotten an EASY 100+ hours out of both.
squid5580 said:
I don't think we can expect games to evolve until we gamers do. Once we reach the point where we appreciate games for what they are, not bashing them for what they aren't, then we can expect the industry to follow suit.
I started playing games in 1988 when I was 6. Games have come a LONG way and are still improving every Tuesday (general release day in the US). Look at Diablo, Diablo 2, and soon Diablo 3.
If you don't think there is any progress in gaming you should find another hobby and stop funneling your money into this industry. I for one have never been happier to be a gamer.