It's very important in music games.
Apart from that the use of sound is more important in most video games.
Apart from that the use of sound is more important in most video games.
Haha, wow. Did they actually do that?SteinFaust said:for most games, yes, it's great for setting atmosphere, or conveying an emotion or subtext.
you have no idea how many serious scenes can be turned into comedies by playing "Tijuana Taxi" or the Benny Hill theme in the background.
but for games like Crackdown, Dynasty Warriors or Tetris, where all that matters is you concentrate on what you're doing (killing, smashing bricks etc) it's okay to plug in your flash drive and turn up the tunes.
to me, it's always good to have the option. not that i NEEDED to, but i found it EXTREMELY pretentious that in Halo 3 they had a message that comes up when you try to play custom music that said something like "adding your own music will compromise the cinematic experience that is Halo 3". i just wanted to line up the people in charge of Bungie and individually slap each of them in the mouth.
you are a bad person, i love the music from diablo 2.ProfessorLayton said:Depends. Sometimes the music is really good and can help let you know what's coming, build suspense, or add to the intense fights as seen in Left 4 Dead. Sometimes it's just there so the entire game won't be you walking around in silence because that would be boring as seen in Gears of War and pretty much every game ever. Sometimes a nice lack of music can build suspense like in Metal Gear Solid.
But sometimes it doesn't matter. Whenever I play Diablo II, I always have my iPod on listening to my own music.