They are actually making a LOT of changes to the formula. They aren't changing the core gameplay, because that would be stupid. But they are changing the way the campaign works (dying affects the whole game, you make choices etc) and they are also changing a LOT about how MP works (they are scrapping everything Modern Warfare 2, BO and MW3 added and starting anew). They also have the obvious new setting, which means more vehicles and such. They have already confirmed fully controllable jets and horses. They are also adding a lot in the zombies front. It'll still be the same "survive endless waves, get money, kill zombies", but it will probably have a lot of changes and they've confirmed it's going to have a 6 hour campaign and other things.CrossLOPER said:It's not the issue of whether or not the game has a new engine, it's what this game brings new to the table. The answer is difficult to define since they are trying out a new setting. This is obfuscated by the fact that they released the same game several times since 2007 and now they are trying to push something that looks like Crysis out into the market. Obviously it's going to be 60$ and it's going to follow the same formula as the previous titles. There are a ton of futuristic shooters out there, many of them good or at least passable. new players may be somewhat hard to come by, so are MW players going to like the different setting and presumably weapons?
Who is this game for? They have been riding the "Modern Warfare" train for a while and the setting and weapons as well as the engine have become familiar to the core players, who are essentially the only ones who are a sure sell.
SL33TBL1ND said:If you have a car, and you've replaced every piece of it at some point along the line, is it still the same car?
Something to think about.
Some of the things may not be the exact truth, since I just got this out of memory. But there's a kotaku article somewhere, wait a sec. http://kotaku.com/5906808/48-things-that-you-should-know-about-call-of-duty-black-ops-iiCrossLOPER said:Source for any of that.ToastiestZombie said:They are actually making a LOT of changes to the formula. They aren't changing the core gameplay, because that would be stupid. But they are changing the way the campaign works (dying affects the whole game, you make choices etc) and they are also changing a LOT about how MP works (they are scrapping everything Modern Warfare 2, BO and MW3 added and starting anew). They also have the obvious new setting, which means more vehicles and such. They have already confirmed fully controllable jets and horses. They are also adding a lot in the zombies front. It'll still be the same "survive endless waves, get money, kill zombies", but it will probably have a lot of changes and they've confirmed it's going to have a 6 hour campaign and other things.
If the engine still has most of the original parts, then yes, it's still more or less the same car.SL33TBL1ND said:If you have a car, and you've replaced every piece of it at some point along the line, is it still the same car?
Something to think about.
Portal 1 was a beautiful game and Portal 2 looks even better.Metalrocks said:fully agree. not every game needs to look awesome. as long it still looks alright and it works, why not keep it? look at games like portal 2, dear esther. the engine is old but still looks good. or even the unreal engine. its also old but they still manage to tune it up a bit and is still hardware friendly.
i cant remember hearing people complaining about amnesia. the graphics werent nice either but still delivered a nice atmosphere.
but i have to agree with others. the graphics dont look so good in MW3 as in black ops 1. i played black ops again and it does really look much better then MW3 in my opinion. also, less fagkimo noobs.
anyway, it will not be a hardware hungry piece of software that requires some people to get a new machine.