Poll: Has the success of Call of Duty done more harm than good?

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Kevon Huggins

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Qouting from IGN
For centuries, man has been predicting the end of the world as we know it. The Mayans, Nostradamus, R.E.M. ? they've all been singing the same tune. What none of them managed to predict however, was that the world would be destroyed by Call of Duty. Well, the world of video games, at least.

Come on, you've been sensing it for a while. You've looked on in despair as yet another FPS is released that wants to be Black Ops. You've felt the mounting deluge of dissatisfaction that's been building inside you ever since Activision clearly realised Call of Duty 4 was a gambit that very much paid off, and could conceivably continue to pay off year, after year, after year at the cost of an entire genre of gaming.

So what do you do about it? Once it's dawned on you that you've been playing the same game with different titles for years now, you look to alternatives. But guess what? They're all uncomfortably familiar; especially when it comes time to go online. At this point your internal reactor reaches critical mass, explodes, and your passion for the act of first-person digital warfare becomes a shadow burnt into the couch where you used to sit for hours and ponder the great quandaries of the 21st century schizoid gamer: "AK-74u w/ grip or FAMAS?" and "Where best to camp?" and, gradually, "Wow, this kind of sucks," and, eventually, "Why is everything trying to be this game?"

image=http://xbox360media.ign.com/xbox360/image/article/116/1160501/toby_cod_inline1_1302220288.jpg
Spit the difference

Call of Duty engineered the destruction of its race, allowing its masters to subjugate the universe, giving them wealth and power beyond anybody's wildest dreams. Now it controls the evolution of any species or technology that it judges to be a potential threat; the greatest FPS scientists and developers forced to work under the supervision of so much inexplicable profit. For that, the global tribunal of gamingdom must put Call of Duty on trial. Intermediaries in this affair include but are not limited to anyone bemoaning the rise of casualised meta-gaming to a seat of absolute power. Hypocritically enough, however, if you play Black Ops then you become part of the problem ? or, at the very least, you become an unpaid beta tester, according to UK-based consumer advocacy group Gamers' Voice, who've been taking the concept of a trial extremely literally for some time now. Figuratively or literally, it's a trial that's sorely needed.

So far every glimmer of salvation has been swiftly snuffed, undone by the very tyrant they each seek to usurp. When the Medal of Honor reboot loomed on the horizon, bristling with bearded promise, hope for a better tomorrow stirred in the weary hearts of gamers everywhere. A new challenger had appeared; EA finally taking the fight to Activision with a game that? looked indistinguishable from Call of Duty, and? played similarly? and? might as well have been called Crap Ops, provided that name hadn't already been attributed to Black Ops by certain quarters. Even formerly unique FPS franchises aesthetically outside CoD's jurisdiction towed the line to some extent: Killzone 3's heavier sci-fi tread couldn't escape the prevalence of identically-implemented perks and killstreaks; neither could Crysis 2, despite its dog-tag riff on the former's familiar theme. And Homefront? THQ might be hurling optimistic press release confetti into the air to placate investors, but every gamer knows the truth at the heart of that disappointment.

We're seeing the backlash now. Dead Space 2 was criticized by many for its by-the-numbers multiplayer modes, while the upcoming Prey 2 has no multiplayer to speak of at all. DICE is even actively taking to Activision's lackluster modus operandi in the press, with General Manager Karl-Magnus Troedsson recently launching a salvo of unguided missiles in the obvious direction of Kotick's Fourth Reich and its many silent partners: "The competitors are out there, they're established, and they're very, very big. We believe that they are not innovating, that they are treading water. They're using the same engine," he added, "the same recipe for building a game. At some point you need to take that leap. I haven't seen them take that leap since a long time ago

It's an interesting sentiment given that, by all hands-off reports, Battlefield 3's single-player looks and possibly plays a lot like Black Ops. No one can be completely sure, however, as no-one's been hands-on with the latest Great White FPS Hope just yet. Have you already pre-ordered yourself a Limited Edition copy? Maybe you have. Scared? You should be, but for a much more worrying reason than the fact DICE might be setting you up for yet another hum-drum offering of derivative tin-can target practice (they have brought back prone, you know, and that means dolphin-dives, and? wait, is that some quick time events we see?).

You now have more in common with Bobby Kotick than is comfortable to admit. The aggressive expanse that is his waistline might swell concurrently with Call of Duty's success, but so too does his receding helmet of ever-shrinking red ripcurls. And how many times has Black Ops made you pull your hair out, either directly or indirectly? It's not just the screaming frustration inherent to a sudden blinding crash whilst you're up 195-190 in the tensest game of Domination ever or being informed in slow-motion that ENCHANTMENT_LOL has nailed you from afar with a frag grenade tossed mindlessly into the ether (again), it's also the fact that everything else not so much wants as needs to repeat this tired montage of firefight fallacies over, and over, and over ? and the more they decry this increasingly obvious dead-end, they more likely they are to be trapped in it. The first-person shooter has gone nowhere for years largely because of this series' success; in some cases, it's even gone backwards.

How does he sleep at night? On a posturepedic mattress stuffed with your hopes and dreams.

Why? Money, mostly. Big business savvy will always copy rather than create. It's easier, and the herd at large (you) won't turn dissent into action (by not playing the game), which would in turn either force evolution or result in overdue dismantlement à la Guitar Hero. We're gamers; we have a unique addiction that we love to death yet argue for and against constantly, hoping it will improve itself but feeling more or less powerless either way. It's not wholly unlike being the ***** in a relationship. Simply asking gamers not to play the latest and greatest is totally unfeasible. What it really takes is the stumbling of the status quo to fire up the signal flare of change, and while Homefront's crippled offensive is a very disappointing thing indeed for gamers, it is also a means to a much greater end. It is a Call of Duty copycat that ticks all the right boxes, but fails to rise above campaign gameplay mediocrity. Perhaps it will be the last straw?


In times of tragedy it does us good to laugh, and laugh we should ? it's just too bad the comforting comedy we crave is almost as tragic as the tragedy it's supposed to be relieving. The only reason Call of Duty has become such a billion-dollar gaming behemoth is because the franchise at large took a safe but calculated risk back in 2007 with Call of Duty 4, turning 1944 into present day while every other FPS around it pushed forward ? whilst marching on the spot ? in a slow wave of identikit WWII-centric ennui. Call of Duty 4 didn't do much to innovate, but sometimes changing your stripes is all that's needed, and the rest will follow. Ironically, hilariously, everyone else followed, and continue to do so.

Hope lies with Battlefield 3 ? but even men with their mouths full of trash-talk need to eat.
 

Rnr1224

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Mar 21, 2011
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i believe that it has. every company wants to create a game very similar to cod because of the money that it keeps bringing in.
 

GiantRaven

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Rnr1224 said:
i believe that it has. every company wants to create a game very similar to cod because of the money that it keeps bringing in.
Every company? Really? You might be getting a little carried away there...
 

king_katchit

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Mar 16, 2011
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As I play so little multiplayer really, I don't mind either way.

Let the people pay for what they want to play.
 

Yoh3333

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Feb 7, 2011
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In 2 ways i can answer this:
Industry wise it has done harm. It was such a huge succes that everone wanted that succes and then things started to be fast-paced and shooter genres takeing the lead. People compete with the giant but they should know that not every game can topple a giant.
The devs and publishers want money so they go for whats hot. This is harming the industri.
BUT it has also done a heck load of good! Call of duty is the first game (except World of warcraft) to become so incredibily mainstream that an entire generation of younger (sometimes loudmouthed) people have picked up the game, hence introducing alot of people to an action packed kind of entertainment they may or may not have given a chance at first.

This new generation will give a huge boost to the industry as it develops. It now has a huge market in the younger demographic and those people will grow up to become like you, the older generation.
I myself is in that age group BUT i started back with Timesplitters... (best game EVAH!! and oblivion)

so yea, i personally think that the new introduction of players is heavily outweighing the simple "shootem up" trend that has been introduced to the industri.

p.s. I don't know if industri is with i or y at the end... please correct me, English is not my native language...
 

Space Spoons

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Aug 21, 2008
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Honestly, I can't help but see the CoD formula as anything more than a fad that will come and go. Remember the Super Nintendo era, where every game was a cartoony platformer with a forest level, a minecart level, a snow level and a volcano level? Then, a few years later, Mario 64 hit, and suddenly, every game was aping the 3D collect-the-thing formula. Following that, when the PS2 came to prominence and Grand Theft Auto exploded, every game was an open-world sandbox crime simulator with a heavy emphasis on the "gangsta" image.

FPS games like CoD are just this generation's Donkey Kong/Mario 64/GTA. It'll pass, and the industry will be no worse for the wear.
 

RatRace123

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Dec 1, 2009
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I say, yes, at least for the FPS genre. COD's got a monopoly on it, essentially making it the WoW of FPSes.
I suppose you could also say that it's colored the landscape of the genre and every studio wants to copy it, but I don't think that's entirely the case.

What can ya do though? It makes money and it's super popular. It's a current industry trend, but those don't last forever.
 

gigastar

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Sep 13, 2010
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And thats why i think CoD, and the 'realistic' FPS genre at that, is doomed.

Its approaching a stage where every non-CoD FPS is trying to be CoD. EA is the biggest offender of this with the Medal of Honour reboot and the upcoming Battlefield 3.

And the worst offender is THQ, who did Homefront.

I hold no doubt that the FPS genre is doomed, im just a bit worried over what, if anything, can replace it as the mainstream genre.
 

Euhan01

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Mar 16, 2011
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I think its happing and we at the hieght of the wave so to speak, but I think people are starting to realise this and are starting to try and change there FPS away from the COD model. Think about it, when COD 4 was released in 2007, everybody started to copy it and send out something similar. Now everybody and his dog has something similar, and developers are starting to seek fresh grounds again, but it won't be another few years for it to actually arrive.
 

omega 616

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May 1, 2009
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I am going to say yes and no.

Yes 'cos it has turned every shooter into it's clone, which is obviously bad.

No 'cos this has been happening for pretty much every generation of gaming. One hting will bloom and the rest try to cash in on the popularity.

If your spending millions making a game you want to make sure it makes you millions back and this is the easiest way of doing that.

If you think "I am going to make a new shooter but it going to have nothing in common with COD, instead I am going to make a new hook for this game", it could be a great idea but the money men will think "ooooh, that sounds a bit risky and risk means risking losing lots of money ... but if we copy what we know will sell it will be less of a risk, make that instead".

Sometimes it does happen though and we get games like bulletstorm, which I am not sure on numbers sold but I assume it did quite well.

delta46 said:
no, not after i saw this vid:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G0sGLmRtBag
Some moron takes a random pill that turns out to be steds, gets depression and his life is saved by COD means that COD didn't effect the industry?

How is one effected by the other?
 

Shirokurou

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Mar 8, 2010
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If it means more imitators of it, then it's a bad thing.

I actually prefer BFBC2, cause of the vehicles and destructibility.
 

Samson5090

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Jul 15, 2009
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What with many game wanting to be "Call of doodie clone number 625" (Cough homefront cough) I'm going to go with yes...But because i like to shake things up a bit I'm going to say no also.

I think the biggest problem with call of duty is call of duty, there are far to many studios supposedly working on the next big COD and when you really think about it most COD players only buy it for the multiplayer, if it begins to go the EA route of bringing out the same game but tweeked every year then people are going to lose intrest very quickly
 

Chewster

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Apr 24, 2008
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This happens with every generation of popular games, I think.

Given how hard they've managed to fuck the series up already, I doubt the influence will last too much longer. Eventually, like we did with World War Fucking One shooters, we will move on to new ground.

Remember, that was where the CoD series began.
 

Mr.logic

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Nov 18, 2009
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I don't think so. The massive success, and excellent quality of the series overall is something mainstream media cannot ignore. Even if there are several clones. It's like the Hangover a movie so funny, and popular that ever comedy since then has claimed to be just as funny in their commercial. Just like every realistic shooter since modern warfare 1 has claimed to be as good as call of duty. Excellence spawns clones =D
 

Evil Tim

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Apr 18, 2009
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This was already posted not two days ago.

http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/read/9.276109-Poll-An-interesting-article-on-the-glut-of-generic-shooters