What makes Dark Souls "good"?

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Gaiseric

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The atmosphere. Definitely the atmosphere, it pulls me into the world then makes me fight cool/creepy enemies that can wreck my day if I'm not careful.
 

Sozac

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CODE-D said:
It more fun than Skyrim, simple as that. Looks better too. Skyrim is easier to play but screw that.
That is really bad. Seriously, not only is that not what this thread is about, but it is a very poor post. This isn't really about which is better. Also, out of the RPG's I've played it ranks far below Skyrim and takes a place in my heart over by Dragon Age 2 and thats pushing it because at least I beat DA2 twice, but that was because that was a big letdown. I had low hopes for Dark Souls and it was good for the majority of the time I played and at the high points it was pretty good, but it was the 20% of the time I just couldn't bear the terrible fighting and nonexistent story.
Also, while the aesthetics or Dark Souls are good, it doesn't hold a candle to the vast beauty of Skyrim. Also, considering Skyrim is 20 times the size it makes up for the small glitches found that are usually patched early.
 

Ordinaryundone

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Sozac said:
I don't like grinding and shouldn't have to, I was also so mad about Smough and Ornstein that I killed Solaire, so thats a huge oops on my part because I love that guy in 2v2 fights, but I shouldn't need him, and in the end I don't care that much anymore.
What do you mean, you shouldn't need him? The O and S are perfectly killable by yourself. Solaire and other players are just there to make it easier. Ditto with grinding. Like any RPG, if you can't do it with the level/equipment you have, then you have to work to get better stuff. That is just how the game is.

Honestly, I think you are playing the wrong game. Dark Souls is an RPG first, and an action game second. If you don't want to grind and work towards better equipment, then play something like DMC. If you truly feel this is hopeless, the either role a new character and play more carefully, or take the disc out and stop complaining that it wasn't the game you wanted to play.
 

Sozac

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Theflyingass said:
I'm always kinda boggled at people who say they hated this game and thought it was shit (Not directed at the OP)...But then go onto say they put something like 15-25 hours into it. Apparently it was compelling enough to pull you through 2 campaigns worth of a normal AAA title.

Once I got used to the combat (I was mislead into thinking it was quick and responsive when it was responsive but slow) my only problems with the game were the FPS issues, which was inevitably what made me move onto other titles for now.
Yeah I wonder that myself. Truth is there were only certain parts that made me want to quit, like the arrows and bosses, where the rest of the game was really easy. I think I made decisions that just proved to be bad, like I don't like pyromancy as much as my friend did(he really hyped it up). Either way I don't care much for the game anymore.
 

Danny 6Speed

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May 16, 2011
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Casual Shinji said:
I love Dark Souls first and foremost for the twisted fantasy images it delivers.

I also love how unapologetic it is. The gameworld isn't there for you to conquer it, it simply exsists on its own terms and if you try to fuck with any of the inhabitants then they'll fuck you right back. And they don't care about playing by the rules or honorable battle, all they want is your head on a stake by whatever dirty means necessary.
I don't like it because it's hard and I need skillful tactics to win, I like it because this is how I imagine a dark fantasy realm to be; Merciless!!!

I DISLIKE Dark Souls however for the lack of personal emotional involvement. There's a story but it's mainly told through the environment. There are no real recurring characters nor does your own character feel like he/she's really part of anything. This makes your actions and conquests feel rather meaningless in the end.
That's because you have to follow the story lines to meet these people and learn their stories and saving their asses from various fates and even discovering them stuck in a compromising situation.
 

Sozac

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Ordinaryundone said:
Sozac said:
I don't like grinding and shouldn't have to, I was also so mad about Smough and Ornstein that I killed Solaire, so thats a huge oops on my part because I love that guy in 2v2 fights, but I shouldn't need him, and in the end I don't care that much anymore.
What do you mean, you shouldn't need him? The O and S are perfectly killable by yourself. Solaire and other players are just there to make it easier. Ditto with grinding. Like any RPG, if you can't do it with the level/equipment you have, then you have to work to get better stuff. That is just how the game is.

Honestly, I think you are playing the wrong game. Dark Souls is an RPG first, and an action game second. If you don't want to grind and work towards better equipment, then play something like DMC. If you truly feel this is hopeless, the either role a new character and play more carefully, or take the disc out and stop complaining that it wasn't the game you wanted to play.
This is a game I want to play and I want to enjoy it the way everyone else seems too. I get that feeling with a lot of the enemies except 2 v 1. That is when the game really breaks. I know if I can get one of them dead I will destroy the super version of the other. I might even just kill Smough first even though every guide is telling me that's a bad move. I practically know Orstein's movements though so I'd rather do that if I can.
 

Twilight_guy

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I'm hearing a lot of people talking about "not holding your hand". That's nice and a sign of a good tutorial, but I'm also hearing people talking about the game not telling you anything at all and having to go search for answers, that's terrible game design. A game needs to show you the mechanics and teach you how to play. The best games do it without you knowing but not telling the player at all is expecting them to know something they don't which is an instant failure for your game. Some people like the hard challenge of brute force and trial and error gameplay but everything I ever heard in game design points to that being horrible design and not the way to make games. I haven't played the games so I obviously can't judge this issue for the game but I'd like to point out that issue. There is a line between "hard but fair" and "hard because of poor design".
 

Ariseishirou

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Aug 24, 2010
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You really, really shouldn't need a walkthrough to beat the game. It ruins the challenge, and the challenge is a large part of appeal, in an era when games have quite simply pandered to the lowest common denominator (even the "Very Hard" modes). (Disclaimer: it's fine to use a walkthrough if there's one item you just can't find, it is after all still an RPG; but using it for strategies means you aren't developing your own, which is lame.)

I myself didn't find Dark Souls as difficult as Demon's Souls, not by a long shot, but that could be because I played the same class again, so I had all of those strategies pre-developed, and they're a big part of the challenge. Plus some of the discipline is the same in both games - by discipline, I mean never rounding corner without your shield up, never heading out into an intersection without looking both ways first, etc. - and after getting instakilled the first hundred times that way in Demon's Souls, you won't be in Dark Souls. Plus some of the boss/speciality fights play out similarly. ...So I'd say if you're playing Dark Souls for the first time it's just as hard as Demon's Souls, but if you've played Demon's Souls it won't be (and probably if you've played Dark Souls first now and you go back to play the original, it won't be as difficult).

So yes I play it specifically for the challenge. Very few games really make me think these days in order to come up with some coherent strategy, and this one does. Plus the atmosphere in both games is top-notch. They remind me of the original Diablo that way. The story is easily miss-able if you aren't paying attention, or you don't bother to connect the dots, but I love stories like that. Especially if they have a lot of ambiguity. (Same reason I loved SMT: Nocturne.)

They're not for everyone - my roommate has no interest in them because he doesn't want to die a million times over and over for tiny incremental gains, it's not his idea of fun - and there's no shame in that. But for people who hate having things handed to them (success - all too often the game is too easy; workable strategy - it will have some navi-esque character yammering in your ear telling you what works and what doesn't; the plot - some NPC stands there and explains it all) it's heaven.
 

Ariseishirou

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Twilight_guy said:
There is a line between "hard but fair" and "hard because of poor design".
If it'll pique your interest at all, "hard but fair" is the tagline of just about every positive review of the game. It would be mine, too. A friend who saw me playing the game and dying ten, twenty times in the same spot asked me how I could possibly enjoy it, and that was my answer: it's hard but fair. Every time I died, I was doing something wrong. Too slow, too fast, not from the right angle, not using the right attack, not noticing something. I succeeded when I did it right. The game won't cheap you or use glitches or make any enemy over-powered. You start with the tools to overcome all of the challenges presented to you. The first dungeon teaches you how to use all of them (without telling you, of course, but you must use them to beat it) and after that it's up to you to use your own creativity and intelligence to put them all together to beat the rest.

In a lot of games, dying over and over means it's poorly balanced or badly designed; in Demon's/Dark Souls it's immediately evident that loving care went into both the balance and the design of every area. You'll never win by glitch or by fluke. And trust me: when you die, it isn't frustrating at all. You'll know what you did wrong, and be amped to do it better the next time.
 

Ordinaryundone

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Sozac said:
This is a game I want to play and I want to enjoy it the way everyone else seems too. I get that feeling with a lot of the enemies except 2 v 1. That is when the game really breaks. I know if I can get one of them dead I will destroy the super version of the other. I might even just kill Smough first even though every guide is telling me that's a bad move. I practically know Orstein's movements though so I'd rather do that if I can.
I can appreciate your enthusiasm, but honestly 2 vs. 1 fights are part of the game experience. Its an unfair situation, true, but that's why you have to use every method in your arsenal to even the odds. Use elemental resins, summons players, use magic, smith better weapons and armor and grind levels. You have to do what you have to do, because the game isn't going to pull any punches either. Even if that means "exploits" and patently silly strategies like running through dangerous areas naked.

If you think you can take down Smough first, go for it. The problem is, super Ornstein is considerably tougher for a melee character than Super Smough. SS is basically like fighting any other large melee enemy, but SO moves so fast and constantly that you'll have a rough time keeping close to him. If you are playing a magic character, however, then taking down Smough first is the correct course of action.

I think you should start a new character and take the information you know now to heart. You'll find everything you struggled with earlier to be much easier, and you'll be able to approach areas with your newfound hindsight and be much more efficient, as well as coming out with a more rewarding experience.
 

Ariseishirou

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Ordinaryundone said:
Sozac said:
I don't like grinding and shouldn't have to, I was also so mad about Smough and Ornstein that I killed Solaire, so thats a huge oops on my part because I love that guy in 2v2 fights, but I shouldn't need him, and in the end I don't care that much anymore.
What do you mean, you shouldn't need him? The O and S are perfectly killable by yourself. Solaire and other players are just there to make it easier.
This. All of the bosses are killable by yourself. I was badly underleveled when I beat O and S (by myself) even and I managed it. It took me probably twenty tries, but all it meant is that I had to use a really good strategy and execute it well. This could go for any of the boss fights. Kill O first and then you're pretty much done anyway. You can even cheap him to death with a crossbow if you want.
 

Char12

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To get past the Archer in Anor Londo is easy, simply rum to the left one , he will ge this sword out the right one wont be able to hit you because of the pillar, kill theleft one, then walk to the right one dodge through his arrows, simple didn't need a guide, though it took me like 3 tries
 

Ariseishirou

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Char12 said:
To get past the Archer in Anor Londo is easy, simply rum to the left one , he will ge this sword out the right one wont be able to hit you because of the pillar, kill theleft one, then walk to the right one dodge through his arrows, simple didn't need a guide, though it took me like 3 tries
I sprinted up with my shield up and rammed the one on the right off before the one on the left could shoot me in the back and got around them that way.

It took me a lot more tries than you (probably about ten) but you're right in that you really, really don't need a guide. There are a lot of ways to do it.
 

Mikeyfell

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Aug 24, 2010
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Dark Souls is my game of the year
And I do watch guides but they're not necessary by any means. If you happen to go to an area you shouldn't be in you'll be spanked to death by a big scary monster. =)

The thing that makes Dark Souls so "good" is the combat.
It's really challenging and thoughtful, most common enemies take as much effort as a boss in any normal game.
I started out hating the check point system but after a while I started to appreciate it, it really forces you to push your self. Having to get back to where you died to get back your points really makes you patient.
Using different equipment completely changes your play style.
And the length, I've been at it for 100 hours and I think I have a full third of the game left.

Another thing is the feeling of permanence, there's no saving or loading it's just one continuous game so if you fuck up, you have fucked up, there's no do-over. You don't get that feeling from other games. I'm sure you can think of a time where you reloaded a save because you weren't happy with a dialog option you picked?

My only real criticism is that I don't get a good sense for the plot but this is one of the few games that's so good I'll let that slide.
 

DanielBrown

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I had a lot of fun with the game, but in all honesty; I got really tired of the grinding and constant dying when I got to Blighttown, so I cheated using the Dragon Head. Didn't get that much easier, but at least I could play without too much trial and error. Gets way too frustrating after a while.
What appeals to me is the medieval setting rather than the difficulty. I love those kinds of games, especially in RPGs.

Also think Demon's Souls was the better game. I really liked the linear levels. Thought it fitted the game better.
 

Souplex

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Jul 29, 2008
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At no point is the challenge ever unfair.
If you are a good enough gamer you can beat it.
It's a true test of your manhood.
 

phereck

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Aug 8, 2010
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Great combat
great atmosphere (its creepier than most of today's survival horror games)
beautiful graphics
challengeing (not as much as i thought it would though)
 

Mondai Randy

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Dark Souls is a great experience. It's challenging but not frustrating , and once you beat it , you really do feel accomplished. It's been one of the few games that I have played multiple times after I initially beat it.
 

MegaManOfNumbers

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I'm pretty sure the reason it is loved is because it is hard without being unfair. Unless your REALLY thick the game will not be stupid towards you.

I mean, sure it fires some cheap shots your way numerous times, but after the first scenario you should have learned your lesson.