If Metroid is gamings 'Kane' then Other M is Citizen Kane 2:cool runnings!Netface said:This discussion has already been settled. [http://abcnews.go.com/video/playerIndex?id=8765863]
So you're agreeing with my reply; that FFVII was wonderful for its day, much like Kane, that it was a benchmark that no one really uses (at least in your view), much like Kane, that other things have surpassed it. So you're agreeing that FFVII is the Citizen Kane of videogames; a benchmark product of a bygone era whose loveliness is eclipsed by the unforgiving parade of exponentially expanding submissions into its genre. Cool!ranger19 said:On top of that, your example would seem to agree with what I've said so far. FFVII, wonderful in its time, hasn't aged amazingly well; the graphics look clunky and don't retain the beauty of 16-bit predecessors, and the gameplay, while revolutionary at its time, has been honed since. You could even argue that this gen's popularization of WRPGs has made JRPGs more obsolete too, if you wanted. I loved FFVII, but it's not a game I would want to play much any more. (In my opinion, a better game to play today would be FFV or FFVI, one of the capstone iterations of the 2D era.)
I never contended with that. This reply comes off as a bit sarcastic, especially since your definition of the "Citizen Kane" is pretty much what I said before:Judgmentalist said:So you're agreeing with my reply; that FFVII was wonderful for its day, much like Kane, that it was a benchmark that no one really uses (at least in your view), much like Kane, that other things have surpassed it. So you're agreeing that FFVII is the Citizen Kane of videogames; a benchmark product of a bygone era whose loveliness is eclipsed by the unforgiving parade of exponentially expanding submissions into its genre. Cool!
Compare:Judgmentalist said:the Citizen Kane of videogames; a benchmark product of a bygone era whose loveliness is eclipsed by the unforgiving parade of exponentially expanding submissions into its genre.
I never actually addressed your FFVII point because it was irrelevant at the time: I was simply explaining my use of IMDB as a quick way to gauge a film's current position in society's collective mind. I will take your silence on this point as a concession to my argument.ranger19 said:Citizen Kane is one of the most influential movies ever, but not one of the best; many films since have built on its foundation, and few people would list Kane as their top movie to watch these days.
I'm pretty sure there were 3d games with 'some kind of plot' before Half-Life came out. Like, for example, Banjo-Kazooie.benzooka said:Somehow all I can think of is Half-Life. It was the first proper 3D game with some kind of a plot, and it gave a clue about what games can be like in the future.
This is a bit tricky when asking "Which game is x", when we all aren't clear and of one mind about what the x is. And even if we were, it's still a subjective topic, as is the adjective we're finding a subject for.
So it's all very subjective. And Half-Life.
I forgot to mention it was first such of a game, that I played. Forgot two words from there. So I fixed that and a few other things in the post.GiantRaven said:I'm pretty sure there were 3d games with 'some kind of plot' before Half-Life came out. Like, for example, Banjo-Kazooie.benzooka said:Somehow all I can think of is Half-Life. It was the first proper 3D game I played (not counting DN3D, Blood, Doom's nor Quake's and other titles) with some kind of a plot, and it gave a clue about what games can be like in the future.
This is a bit tricky when asking "Which game is x", when we all aren't clear and of one mind about what the x is. And even if we were, it's still a subjective topic. So both the adjective we are offered, and the subject we're looking for, are subjective.
So it's all very subjective. And Half-Life.
EDIT: edited for clarity.