During the 90's, CD technology was introduced to the realm of gaming, but out of all of the milestones achieved, one of them remained in the 90's and it was the FMV "games", the quotation marks are for whether or not they are games or glorified DVDs with special menus. I brought them up because I've played Sara is Missing and Her Story (two great games BTW) that use live-action cutscenes to enhance the realism of the game, to surprisingly great effect.
FMV or Full Motion Videos were something introduced in the 80's arcades, remaining for some time were in the mainstream consoles with Sega being one of the companies pushing it forward and they stuck around during the PS1 era. But wouldn't you know it, nobody talks about them anymore.
I can see the logic behind them: in a race for better graphics, what's better than real-life graphics? While there were games that stood out such as Gabriel Knight 2 The Beast Within, The 7th Guest, Voyeur and of course, Night Trap [♫ We're gonna find you ♫]. I never heard anyone explicitely calling them good. Plus, looking back on them is almost as awkward as looking at those old family videos. Watchmojo got me covered on those (yes, I am quoting Watchmojo) B-movie and TV actors, low production values, amateurish productions, it's hard to think these were considered "the future" back at their time, even harder that games would improve with such things.
Were you part of that weird period of gaming? Share your opinions and history.
FMV or Full Motion Videos were something introduced in the 80's arcades, remaining for some time were in the mainstream consoles with Sega being one of the companies pushing it forward and they stuck around during the PS1 era. But wouldn't you know it, nobody talks about them anymore.
I can see the logic behind them: in a race for better graphics, what's better than real-life graphics? While there were games that stood out such as Gabriel Knight 2 The Beast Within, The 7th Guest, Voyeur and of course, Night Trap [♫ We're gonna find you ♫]. I never heard anyone explicitely calling them good. Plus, looking back on them is almost as awkward as looking at those old family videos. Watchmojo got me covered on those (yes, I am quoting Watchmojo) B-movie and TV actors, low production values, amateurish productions, it's hard to think these were considered "the future" back at their time, even harder that games would improve with such things.
Were you part of that weird period of gaming? Share your opinions and history.