Try watching a few silent films, technique have developed a lot, gaming is going to take a while to get to it's peak but once it does older games will hold up better.AverageJoe said:Gameplay has evolved over the years just as much as graphics have. Trying to play a game like Deus Ex, MDK, Tomb Raider, or Resident Evil today (as just a few examples I can think of) when you don't have something like nostalgia to fall back on is painful and clunky as all hell, because their respective genres have changed and been refined so much in only a decade (or a bit more). Since I am lucky enough to have no sense of nostalgia (and think its stupid and detrimental to gaming in all ways) I imagine i'll feel very much the same about today's games in another 10 years.zehydra said:I also disagree that they age terribly. The games themselves don't age badly, the graphics become "outdated". A great game can still be great with bad graphics, for the same reason we have black and white movie masterpieces.
Movies or music however, are examples of mediums that don't age badly, because they dont have "mechanics" that you are personally involved in, they are simply entertainment you enjoy with no input into the final product. Movies age very well in the sense that movies from 30-40 years ago can still hold up to today's movies in standards (sometimes they are better in fact). The reason is because very little has changed in our standards for movies even after all that time, except for improved visual effects and other aesthetic qualities. You can't say the same about games at all.
and music doesn't age at all because its entirely subjective.
I'd say that these are some older PC titles that really represent either the pinnacle of their genre, or a significant point in game development. It's slanted towards RPGs, sims, and adventure games, but mostly because those were the genres of the time.Cranyx said:Now that gaming is officially considered an art form, what are some games you should have played to be a "fully versed" gamer?
I'm going to have to disagree. I've been watching through the AFA's Top 100 movies this year, and even among the movies that are selected to be "the best" you can see that modern film-making has changed a lot over the past 80-ish years. Frankly, it's hard to get through some of them, in the same way it's hard to play a game with vastly outdated aesthetics/interface.AverageJoe said:The reason is because very little has changed in our standards for movies even after all that time, except for improved visual effects and other aesthetic qualities.
So are we all just accepting this statement as a given, then?Cranyx said:If you want yourself to be considered well-read, there are certain books you are expected to have read; Shakespeare, Dickens, etc. If you want to be a movie connoisseur, there are certain movies you should have seen, Citizen Kane and what not.
That's why I said in the past 30-40 years rather than the past 80 years. Most movies from the 30s, 40s, 50s, and even a lot of the 60s and some of the 70s are difficult for me to watch now. For exactly the reasons you stated. My point was that movies have much more longevity than games in terms of their age, and unless the advancement of gaming technology significantly slows it will remain that way.Virgil said:I'm going to have to disagree. I've been watching through the AFA's Top 100 movies this year, and even among the movies that are selected to be "the best" you can see that modern film-making has changed a lot over the past 80-ish years. Frankly, it's hard to get through some of them, in the same way it's hard to play a game with vastly outdated aesthetics/interface.
to that I would add Bioshock, Modern Warfare, Shadow of the Colossus, and the first 2 (maybe 3) Halo gamesZakarath said:That's a pretty good list, to it I would add:Still Life said:Total Annihilation.
Command & Conquer and Red Alert.
Doom and Wolf 3D.
Quake.
Descent.
Battlefield 2
S.T.A.L.K.E.R.
Crysis.
Company of Heroes.
Dues Ex.
Star Craft.
Mass Effect series.
Half Life and its sequel.
Star Wars: Tie Fighter.
Gosh, I can think of lots of games that are important, ambitious and bring something new and/or innovative to the medium.
X-Com
Civilization (uhh... #4 I guess)
Minecraft
And, of course, TF2
Maybe Morrowind too.