For me, this generation changed the meaning of what is a AAA title. Go back a few years and AAA title were usually exclusive to one format. Most AAA games these days are multi-platform, when those games may only really be suited for a particular console or PC gamer. I think this is why Nintendo has such a following; generally AAA Nintendo games are developed with Nintendo machines and gamers in mind exclusively (I don't own a Wii btw.)
For most of this generation I played most of my games on a 360. I thought the likes of Bioshock, Mass Effect, Oblivion and Call of Duty Modern Warfare were amazing experiences on 360, but on PC they were a bit meh. I can't really put my finger on why I thought this, but I think that all those games were designed for console and therefore feel a bit odd or clunky on PC.
Anyway, I was really looking forward to the sequels of the likes of Bioshock, Mass Effect on my 360. Yet I didn't enjoy Bioshock 2 (going into menus every two minutes broke the game for me - just doing that broke what immersed me into the original,) Mass Effect 2 (I couldn't bare to finish the game,) Skyrim (I still can't get used to the interface, and it's really easy) or Modern Warfare 2 (traded in on the day I bought it it was that short and I found the story infantile,) to even consider buying the next installments. Even on 360 I didn't like any of these games; in fact my experiences were so bad I started to look elsewhere for my entertainment.
I've moved on now from being a console gamer exclusively; PC is my format of choice now. Most of the AAA games I can think of off the top of my head are being developed and designed for consoles with PC ports as an afterthought (and usually lumped with some form of intrusive DRM and other countermeasures to my PC gaming pleasure
I want to play games designed for the machine I'm using like they were when the original Bioshock came out. As far as I'm concerned the AAA part of the gaming industry is stagnant and as a result I've moved onto other things that I guess some would call "hipster." I didn't want to become a PC gamer though, the industry didn't give me a choice.
I actually find it depressing not liking AAA games these days, and I suspect that is one of the reasons some gamers "hate." While the games industry keeps preaching the next chapter from their AAA book, I just hope one day they realise that many gamers have evolved (or devolved depending on your point of view) to thinking that while most AAA games are indeed good, they are just not good enough.
For most of this generation I played most of my games on a 360. I thought the likes of Bioshock, Mass Effect, Oblivion and Call of Duty Modern Warfare were amazing experiences on 360, but on PC they were a bit meh. I can't really put my finger on why I thought this, but I think that all those games were designed for console and therefore feel a bit odd or clunky on PC.
Anyway, I was really looking forward to the sequels of the likes of Bioshock, Mass Effect on my 360. Yet I didn't enjoy Bioshock 2 (going into menus every two minutes broke the game for me - just doing that broke what immersed me into the original,) Mass Effect 2 (I couldn't bare to finish the game,) Skyrim (I still can't get used to the interface, and it's really easy) or Modern Warfare 2 (traded in on the day I bought it it was that short and I found the story infantile,) to even consider buying the next installments. Even on 360 I didn't like any of these games; in fact my experiences were so bad I started to look elsewhere for my entertainment.
I've moved on now from being a console gamer exclusively; PC is my format of choice now. Most of the AAA games I can think of off the top of my head are being developed and designed for consoles with PC ports as an afterthought (and usually lumped with some form of intrusive DRM and other countermeasures to my PC gaming pleasure
I actually find it depressing not liking AAA games these days, and I suspect that is one of the reasons some gamers "hate." While the games industry keeps preaching the next chapter from their AAA book, I just hope one day they realise that many gamers have evolved (or devolved depending on your point of view) to thinking that while most AAA games are indeed good, they are just not good enough.