really? I was under the impression that not may games suported it, but then again I only got a PS3 recently (for the single player) so I havtn been looking into itOrdinaryundone said:Lots of games have co-op and splitscreen multiplayer, so I`m not really sure what to tell you. In fact, the Multiplayer games I can think of that DON`T offer some sort of split screen option are games that are, traditionally, single player action-adventure, like Assassin`s Creed or Dead Space. Nearly all shooters, racing, fighting, sports, and even puzzle games offer spilt-screen/co-op.
If that's the setting then gaming just becomes one more of the things you may and may not do with friends over. A lot of people who play online are more serious than that even if they're not tournament level players. They're into it for the game, not for the interaction. In fact, a lot of games are ruined by being disproportionately focused on the interaction aspect to the detriment of the actual game-part of the game.Vault101 said:thats the thing though, if your serioues...sureDreiko said:Things like FPSs yeah, since local means split-screen which sucked back in the day...and you're getting this from a guy who loved playing quake 2 on his PSX with 4 way split screen (yes, I actually had a multi-tap). Split screen just ruins a lot of the fun it you're playing on an average size TV.
I don't play any multiplayer games other than fighting games though, and those do have quite a few "same room" competitions cause online lag affects them more than most other genres, so I may be a bit skewed but I don't see much of a problem.
The issue is simply finding a community of skilled players. A lot of people who play games are too lighthearted about them, not taking them seriously etc. so when you get a guy really good at the game it can sorta kill the fun and make him be the one who feels left out by being actually too GOOD at the game, while online there's always someone better and the average person is overall better than the average local player, which makes the games quite a bit more interesting.
When you have people seeking to improve their skills, they'll go for the biggest skill pool imaginable and unless you reside in Tachikawa Tokyo, your local peers won't be up to par with your online competition.
but if you dont have alot of real hardcore "gamer" freinds, and just want to have some freinds over and have a good time, well thats what Im talking about,
I could be wrong, as I haven't played it, but isn't the GoW 3 co-op online only?Genericjim101 said:Epic Games have gone out of their way to add 4 person Co-op to Gears Of War 3 so I'd say it's alive for some and is for me myself... and I look forward to playing Mass Effect 3 with friends!
Im not sure I follow, I dont care about how others play their gamesDreiko said:If that's the setting then gaming just becomes one more of the things you may and may not do with friends over. A lot of people who play online are more serious than that even if they're not tournament level players. They're into it for the game, not for the interaction. In fact, a lot of games are ruined by being disproportionately focused on the interaction aspect to the detriment of the actual game-part of the game.Vault101 said:thats the thing though, if your serioues...sureDreiko said:Things like FPSs yeah, since local means split-screen which sucked back in the day...and you're getting this from a guy who loved playing quake 2 on his PSX with 4 way split screen (yes, I actually had a multi-tap). Split screen just ruins a lot of the fun it you're playing on an average size TV.
I don't play any multiplayer games other than fighting games though, and those do have quite a few "same room" competitions cause online lag affects them more than most other genres, so I may be a bit skewed but I don't see much of a problem.
The issue is simply finding a community of skilled players. A lot of people who play games are too lighthearted about them, not taking them seriously etc. so when you get a guy really good at the game it can sorta kill the fun and make him be the one who feels left out by being actually too GOOD at the game, while online there's always someone better and the average person is overall better than the average local player, which makes the games quite a bit more interesting.
When you have people seeking to improve their skills, they'll go for the biggest skill pool imaginable and unless you reside in Tachikawa Tokyo, your local peers won't be up to par with your online competition.
but if you dont have alot of real hardcore "gamer" freinds, and just want to have some freinds over and have a good time, well thats what Im talking about,
Here's my question to you, if you're not serious and just like games as an option for "things to do with friends when they come over" why do you care about how others end up playing their games? If you do play games more seriously than that then you should understand the charm of a thousand people better at you being available to fight you at any instant and how it overshadows most other options.
Simply put, there's "my friends will come here and will play this game" and there's "we'll play this game and my friends will come here", when the focus is on the friends, you could be doing anything and you'd be having fun, when the focus is on the game however, you're doing something highly specialized which when all participants take seriously ends up as being a whole lot more fun than the previous scenario of doing "just whatever" with them. This in turn makes online play the best option for a lot of people without vivid game scenes in their locations.