Yea, if you play Fallout 3 and turn off all the auto-save points you have the answer to this thread.Redkop said:you know, you could just choose to NOT save the game.
Not even. Playing through hours upon hours of story because of a stray grenade or whatever is lame. I'm thinking of something more akin to the Roguelike, where the games are essentially the same thing, but every time you play, every level of the dungeon/part of the world is procedurally generated, and dying means you roll a new character, with new stats, in a new world/dungeon. The thing is, while games like that exist, I want to see this brought into a more modern era, where instead of ASCII and tilesets, we have 3D, interesting maps and areas.Timelord91 said:Yea, if you play Fallout 3 and turn off all the auto-save points you have the answer to this thread.Redkop said:you know, you could just choose to NOT save the game.
...Now that's just being a fucking asshole. You can make a point without being a jerk about it. Read my above post, please, it explains in a way that might make more sense to you.SideburnsPuppy said:Everyone saying that there is no punishment, make up your own. Put a nail in your thigh and hit it with your hammer every time you get a game over. Might knock some sense into you.
Sorry. Went over what I said, realized what I said, and now I feel like an asshole. I'll be sure to edit it right away.Crazzee said:...Now that's just being a fucking asshole. You can make a point without being a jerk about it. Read my above post, please, it explains in a way that might make more sense to you.SideburnsPuppy said:Everyone saying that there is no punishment, make up your own. Put a nail in your thigh and hit it with your hammer every time you get a game over. Might knock some sense into you.
Glad to be of service.Crazzee said:Also my thread got necroed, that makes me happy. <3
You seem to be missing the point of "permanent". Only a minor segment of gaimng currently employs truly unkillable main characters. The rest is just loading, or worse - autoloading. There is nothing permanent about that. As for the attachement to characters - yeah. There's this odd thing about that - people will find (sometimes very convoluted) ways to keep their character alive with out-of-game means, but they will not spend the extra effort to keep the character from dying in the first place.badgersprite said:But, if permanent character death gives the option of reverting back to an old save, wouldn't that essentially mean the exact same thing as your game just going back to the last save anyway? I think most people get too attached to their characters to not just revert back to an old save. So, interesting in theory, but I'm not sure how it would work in practice.
Judging by a game that has checkpoints is not quite valid. With a game with save-on-exit only, you go into it expecting death, expecting severe punishment for your mistakes. As for the fun aspect, Fun [http://www.dwarffortresswiki.net/index.php/Fun]. By losing irreversibly you gain general skills that should be applicable to various situations in-game (bad game design aside). By having save points, you build specific skills - shooting down boss A with weapon cache W; passing deadly trap filled corridor K with only N health.miracleofsound said:Judging by the rage I felt at having to restart form distant checkpoints after dying in Far Cry 2, I would say I strongly disagree.
Gaming is meant to be fun, and frustration and a sense of loss do not equate to fun for me.
I don't see that happening, please provide more detail.mrhappyface said:No, no, no, no, no! If this is ever adopted by the mainstream it will mean the end of modern gaming and the backslide back to the old coin-ops of the 90's and 80's.
Fuck! Partially ninja'd! (I don't suck at video games).pantsoffdanceoff said:Heavy Rain is doing something where if you die, the game continues and you never get the character back. Considering I'm really shitty at videogames all my characters would be totally dead.