Undead Dragon King said:
What I think you mean to say is that there's literally no point in doing it for the established Mass Effect fanbase. I would agree with you. But that's the whole point. It's not meant for you and me. It's meant for people new to the series. Is it really so terrible that BioWare is trying to appeal to a lot of people? The full, unadulterated "RPG" experience is not affected in any way by the new modes. If you would argue that it dilutes the experience, I would agree to that also. But the only experience being diluted is for the people actually playing "Action" or "Story" modes.
The fact of the matter is the main market Bioware used to catre to was it's fans. Fans of their established franchises and science fiction in general. Mass Effect was reported originally as the "Star Wars of our generation", and that was the general feeling of the games.
Because they are attempting to appeal to the lowest common denominator they end up appealing less of their fanbase. It causes you to lose trust in a company you've loved for years when they start treating their fans as if they're cattle. "Oh well 40% of people like shooters and 40% of people like films. Lets just add an option so we can herd them into one pen or the other and later when we poll them on it we can start marketing more shooters/interactive films"
AD-Stu said:
Sorry, I just don't understand this. At no point will you be forced to play the shooting-only or story-only modes - you'll still be playing the mode that lets you do all the things yourself. So how has your intelligence been insulted, exactly?
The fact it's in the game, a developer actually thought "This is a good idea, our producers like it, EA likes it, the sponsors like it, the fans will love it" and programmed it in, spent money on testing and having to code it into the game just screams waste of time. The fact this is in the game only proves the rest of the game is filled with more of these instances. Of tunnel vision or just lack of concern for quality. That is why it is insulting to my intelligence because it assumes I wont see something wrong with it.
Zhukov said:
Because it carries the implication that the game wasn't tailed specifically to his tastes at the exclusion of all others.
Terrible, I know.
Or my Bioware fanboism disappeared after Dragon Age 2.
The only thing I said I didn't like was Origin and the fact the developers believe putting a feature in that only ten year olds would use was a sound buisiness move. If that is a result of me wanting the game to be custom built to fit my likeness, well so be it. I just prefer a quality game is all, not shlock that is marketed to both Mass Effect fanboys and CoD fanboys at the same time. It doesn't take a genius to know that it won't mix very well.
Note I haven't even criticized multiplayer and people throw the blinders up.
Adam Jensen said:
LordRoyal said:
Adam Jensen said:
I love Mass Effect, but if it turns out to be Origin exclusive on PC, it can burn in hell for all I care.
Unfortunately it is.
I'm in the same boat as well. But it's not only Origin that pisses me off. It's the fact it has those three "Story, Action and RPG modes".
Those are optional. You can set each individual option from those modes in the options menu and create a unique experience. Modes are there for people who can't be bothered with advanced options. There is nothing insulting about giving people more options to play with.
It's not the fact it's optional as much as the fact it's in the game in the first place that shows the lack of artistic credibility the developers have. If a developer gives you a "Shooter" mode, and an "Interactive cutscene mode" it is then within our good graces they give us a "RPG" mode?
It just sounds like a massive marketing stunt to me. Like they are going to poll everyone afterwards asking whether or not they preferred the shooter mode or Interactive Cutscene mode. So that later when EA decides to continue making crap they knew that all they had to do was program it into a successful game and didn't have to do any market research.