True, he did not say it was well written. It is also true that it's a matter of opinion. However, how can someone excuse bad execution and lies? While it is true that some game devs can't quite hold true to everything, it's a bit of a different thing when this little detail concerns ending a series such as this.DrVornoff said:And at what point did, say for example, Yahtzee say that the ending was well-written? I don't remember him saying any such thing. So then what is the "it" to which he is not privy?
They suck? A matter of opinion. Same goes for whining. Now at the badly supported point, I can see that. However, is this because you simply didn't agree with it or was the post like "Endings suck, bye"? Arrogant kinda goes under matter of opinion depending on what you saw.And most of them suck. Or come across as whining. Or are poorly supported. Or are just infuriatingly arrogant. The thing is, people who don't like the ending have been so damn vocal about it for so many damn days that it's impossible to not hear their reasons for being upset. That doesn't mean I have to agree with them 100%.
True, those who just say "X" without supporting it with "Y" are not helping any. However, I could argue that they might have posted this long explanation elsewhere, and simply feel like copy-pasting into another ME3 thread yet again. Does that always fit? Hell no, but disregarding ALL arguments just because of those isn't helping anyone, on both sides.Besides, look at the number of people who just post, "Point? Missing it," or something similarly snarky and then fucking off to do whatever it is they do. Am I supposed to take them seriously? Am I supposed to believe that they really have some kind of lucid, intelligent argument if I just opened my mind up to their brattiness and saw the tormented soul within?
You should take a look here.tehweave said:He's right you know. This is the ending they wanted, it's the ending we got. Deal with it.
I expected Shepherd to die and lo and behold, he did. The relays were destroyed. Alright. What's the problem? I don't see one. It's the inevitable ending that was going to happen. It concluded. I'm actually pretty okay with it. It isn't perfect but it's at least finished. Done. Concluded. Is that the big problem?
There's VOLUMES written about the ending, short ones, long ones, simple ones, exaustive ones, humorous ones, over-zealous ones, and they don't all say the exact same thing. If you are capable of understanding then there's someone out there that you can understand and identify with. If you just don't feel like understanding then you shouldn't try to wheigh in on something that's none of your business.DrVornoff said:Or maybe I don't find the explanations to be all that good. It is possible to read an argument and still not buy into it.Gigatoast said:Well you certainly haven't been looking very hard for explainations, there's one at the top of this page and probably about a hundred others on this site alone.
So your problem is with people talking about it at all? This is just like the brony wars, you can ignore them, if you argue with them about it then you're just keeping the discussion from moving to something else. You're just tired of people being passionate about something? Well tough s**t, you can't just say "I'm not interested in what you're talking about so stop talking about it." you're the one who got yourself involved.DrVornoff said:Maybe I'm just sick of hearing it. I have no problem with people who just plain didn't like the ending. What I have a problem with is the people who won't shut the fuck up about it and move on with their lives. The people who insist that the ending must be completely redone to appease them (though thankfully those are becoming fewer in number). The people who react to anyone with an opinion other than their own with, "You don't get it. Also you're an asshole."Also, the majority of the "retake" crowd don't hate Bioware or even the game itself, just the ending. So yes, I'm pretty confidant this can be considered you "not getting it".
How about the problem that everyone who was on Earth at the time, you know the Asari, Quarians, Turians, Krogans, Salarians, all those people, are now stuck there and have no way to get back home? Because that's a big one. What happened afterwards? Why was Joker and the rest of my crew flying away? Where did they land? Who are the old man and young boy at the end talking about "The Shepard"?tehweave said:He's right you know. This is the ending they wanted, it's the ending we got. Deal with it.
I expected Shepherd to die and lo and behold, he did. The relays were destroyed. Alright. What's the problem? I don't see one. It's the inevitable ending that was going to happen. It concluded. I'm actually pretty okay with it. It isn't perfect but it's at least finished. Done. Concluded. Is that the big problem?
It really is special, it's 3 games, 89 hours and 50 minutes of brilliantly constructed story and gameplay that syncs.tautologico said:I get the disappointment and how the ending not being so good affects the overall quality of the experience, but I still think Mass Effect is something special as a series, and ME3 in particular. So what I'm saying is that I don't think the ending ruins the whole series. Actually, ME3 has the most difficult choices to make, with more far-reaching consequences than anything on the series before.
It's also the first time a game trilogy tells a single story sticking to a continuity based on the player's character, instead of a general canon continuity that is fixed. I still think that's pretty good.
I am very much aware of what the point that's been made by everyone and their grandmother about ME3 is. MY point is that Bioware isn't just one guy doing his own thing. Remember Tali's recruitment mission? That whole dark energy thing was supposed to go somewhere that makes the larval reaper seem less retarded. But the 'author' in your analogy is gone, EA waltzed in and changed things, put different guys in charge, and then probably butchered THEIR work to sell later as DLC. It's already been tampered with, someone already came in and made changes. And yes, if the book was crap I would throw it back telling them to do it again. They don't have to of course, which everyone who makes that tired point fails to mention. But I'm not just going to pat them on the head and give them a cookie like a condescending grandmother and say good job. We don't want our ending, we just want one that doesn't fucking suck.Taunta said:The point is that it's Bioware's (not EA's) story, and not the fans' story. You're allowed to have your opinion of the story, you're even allowed to write fanfiction that changes the ending if you're displeased with it, but he's addressing anyone who feels entitled to a different ending. It's figuratively like reading a book, and then after finishing it crumpling it up and throwing it back at the author, yelling "No! You got it all wrong! Do it again!"Fr said:anc[is]So EA gets to fuck with the writer's (btw, the head writer for ME1 was gone for ME3) story, but the fans don't?
It's the author's story. They are entitled to end it with whatever message they want. Now if you don't feel entitled to a different ending, but you feel like the current one was poorly mishandled, that's an entirely different story.
Here is why I have a problem with what you are saying; I was personally disappointed with the ending of ME3, although this is the first time I have expressed that on the internet, so I am not one of these so called whiny fans. (I would like to believe in the Indoctrination Theory, but I'm not sure Bioware can be that subtle.) The vast majority of people who disliked the ending don't actually believe that they control it, and should get to decide what happens, as various people on this site who shall remain nameless keep telling us. We are simply disappointed and are telling the creation of the content that we personally didn't like it. This is an entirely acceptable thing to do in any form of creative medium. The backlash against the ending has been mind blowing, but perhaps this should tell Bioware something.Limecake said:Listen, I have empathy for my fellow gamer for most things. But not this.
This whole ME3 ending thing was blown way way out of proportion. I can understand you are upset and saddened by the ending but that's where my empathy ends.
You can be dissatisfied with a game, you can be pissed all your questions weren't answered, you can be upset with bioware and even boycott future games. But you aren't entitled to tell the developers what to do.
If you don't like how they do business/make games/talk to customers/make videos/listen to music than you are fully within your right to not support them don't buy their products, don't visit their forums and don't hang onto their every word like it's a promise.
but don't buy their game and then complain you don't like it and they need to change it, it's asinine. I have a copy of alone in the dark but you don't see me petitioning Atari to take out the driving sections and replace it with something better.
not to mention the whole 'retake mass effect' movement couldn't be any more disorganized, other than 'we want a new ending' everyone involved seems to have a different idea of what should happen.
can we just move on now?
because obviously the hatred for Mass Effect 3's ending must be unanimous across all gamer culture.Smertnik said:I love how every time someone speaks against this whole retake ME3 nonsense people just dismiss everything with 'Meh, s/he just doesn't get it'
You just want one that "doesn't fucking suck", presenting one as an objective term.Fr said:anc[is]I am very much aware of what the point that's been made by everyone and their grandmother about ME3 is. MY point is that Bioware isn't just one guy doing his own thing. Remember Tali's recruitment mission? That whole dark energy thing was supposed to go somewhere that makes the larval reaper seem less retarded. But the 'author' in your analogy is gone, EA waltzed in and changed things, put different guys in charge, and then probably butchered THEIR work to sell later as DLC. It's already been tampered with, someone already came in and made changes. And yes, if the book was crap I would throw it back telling them to do it again. They don't have to of course, which everyone who makes that tired point fails to mention. But I'm not just going to pat them on the head and give them a cookie like a condescending grandmother and say good job. We don't want our story, we just want one that doesn't fucking suck.Taunta said:The point is that it's Bioware's (not EA's) story, and not the fans' story. You're allowed to have your opinion of the story, you're even allowed to write fanfiction that changes the ending if you're displeased with it, but he's addressing anyone who feels entitled to a different ending. It's figuratively like reading a book, and then after finishing it crumpling it up and throwing it back at the author, yelling "No! You got it all wrong! Do it again!"Fr said:anc[is]So EA gets to fuck with the writer's (btw, the head writer for ME1 was gone for ME3) story, but the fans don't?
It's the author's story. They are entitled to end it with whatever message they want. Now if you don't feel entitled to a different ending, but you feel like the current one was poorly mishandled, that's an entirely different story.
Why should I say 'It's a shame, nothing to do now but move on', someone doesn't have a decent argument unless they accept that what they're arguing for will never change anything, they just accept inevitability?DrVornoff said:That assumes that you were one of the ones making a decent argument and then moving on with his/her life. At this point, how should I know if you were one of them? I don't know you from Adam.
Here's the thing, if you're one of the people who said, "I didn't like the ending and here's why. It's a shame, but nothing to do now but move on," then the words of people like Yahtzee and Shamus Young don't apply to you. If on the other hand you're not one of those people, then don't assume that your argument is perfect and it's everyone else's fault and that they're too ignorant to understand.
...except for that fact that BioWare PROMISED things they things they didn't keep.tautologico said:I don't think any of these people writing about the controversy is saying you don't have a right to not like the ending, to complain about it, to never buy Bioware games again, etc. No one is telling you what to think about the game or the ending.
The problem is that some fans feel that Bioware "owes" them a better ending or some such, and try to demand a new ending from them. This is what most journalists are talking against, not the fact of not liking the ending.
Indeed.boag said:I hope a lot of us consumers learn not to trust bioware again, this whole experience has been souring.
And if the big lesson from the ending is "you dont always get what you want", then I hope people take notice of this lesson and apply it to all related things.
Bioware isnt selling enough games, "well tough you dont always get what you want
Internet Reviewers arent getting enough hits on their pages or videos "well tough you dont get what you want"
I hope people that read this get the not so subtle hints.
again, there is nothing wrong with being vocal about not liking something. I never claimed you aren't allowed to be upset about the game or you aren't allowed to not like the ending. Telling Bioware you aren't satisfied with the ending to their trilogy is a perfectly normal reaction to something.Zagzag said:Here is why I have a problem with what you are saying; I was personally disappointed with the ending of ME3, although this is the first time I have expressed that on the internet, so I am not one of these so called whiny fans. (I would like to believe in the Indoctrination Theory, but I'm not sure Bioware can be that subtle.) The vast majority of people who disliked the ending don't actually believe that they control it, and should get to decide what happens, as various people on this site who shall remain nameless keep telling us. We are simply disappointed and are telling the creation of the content that we personally didn't like it. This is an entirely acceptable thing to do in any form of creative medium. The backlash against the ending has been mind blowing, but perhaps this should tell Bioware something.
yes this is entirely reasonable, you can be happy they choose to fix the ending. You can choose to not buy any more Bioware games. This is all fine I have absolutely no issue with people being dissatisfied/upset with a product. But you also can't be upset if Bioware chooses to leave the ending as is.We are not expressing our entitlement to have Bioware do what we want with the series, we are simply telling them that we didn't enjoy it. If they subsequently choose to alter the ending in some way, then they are doing that to fix what we didn't like. This, again, is entirely reasonable.