True but at least to me I felt like I was playing a weird cross between Deus Ex and Planescape Torment. Sure the basic gameplay is standard FPS but the open level format and plasmids made it play like an RPG in my experience.BillyShakes said:I agree that it doesn't feel like CoD, but it still feels like just another First-person shooter with RPG "elements" tacked on.
Only if you let it be. I found that experimenting with Plasmids opened up a wide variety of tactics that you could use, this is why I forgive the low difficulty of the game it allows you to experiment and go for the weird builds plasmids made possible.When I say it isn't deep, I mean that I find the gameplay overall to be rather shallow.
(Turn, shoot; turn, shoot; plasmid, shoot.)
While I agree on the basic plot being fairly flat (except for the twist), most of the actual story is conveyed using sbtext and visuals, which made for a far deeper experience than I've seen in a game before or since.The story, while being predictable, was alright, and it brought you into the world of Rapture somewhat well. The atmosphere was also splendid, depicting a post-catastrophe underwater-city in a good way.
Oblivion TES is meant for PC, I found it dreadful on the console. Get Borderlands, it's fun.adam352 said:Ive been looking at both (borderlands as well, oblivion stands out atm because of its price, could anyone tell me about the characters i would be able to create?
Thanks
Definitely follow this advice. It's a great deal, and I agree that Bioshock would he;lp you sort of ease into the genre, going straight to Oblivion may be a bit unnerving. Borderlands would work too, i think it's a brilliant game.lack of self CTRL said:if you're new to RPG's i'd reccomend Bioshock. the rpg elements are pretty simplified so its a good way of getting into the genre without being overwhelmed by the depth of some of the other titles. actually you can buy bioshock & TES: oblivion as a 2 disk set. so buy both!