shenmue, although a far better game, was totally different. gta 3 was the first 3d open world game where you could do anything you want. stealk cars, kill everyone you want, etc etc
bultje112
That's exactly what I mean. GTA 3 allowed you to go around doing what you want with barely any consequences. It was the fact that you were free to break the rules, that is what I really liked about GTA 3 when I first played it. It was a different experience from Shenmue, but in terms of urban open-world design, I'd actually say they were quite similar, but just with different goals. Shenmue's goal was to create a more realistic urban environment that felt closer to our own real lives, whereas GTA 3's goal was to create an anarchic urban environment that made us feel almost 'divine' in how much freedom we had to break the rules of society. Shenmue felt too real, whereas GTA 3 felt more like a fantasy, hence why the latter succeeded with the masses in a way the former couldn't.
I'm not sh!tting on your opinion (I'm just curious), but what is it that makes you think Shenume is better than GTA3?
GreySeal9
I can't speak for him, but personally, I initially preferred GTA 3, but after getting bored of it, I gave Shenmue another chance and ended up enjoying that a lot more than GTA 3. Despite being a bit more restrictive than GTA 3 (i.e. you can't beat people up, and at times certain places are inaccessible), at the same time Shenmue was also a lot more progressive than GTA 3 in other ways. Shenmue allowed you to knock on any door and enter into most buildings (which you couldn't do in GTA until Vice City), you could open almost any cupboard or drawer (which GTA also didn't allow), it had a lot of mini-games (which GTA didn't have until much later), the NPC's felt like actual people going about their own daily routines (and the realistic graphics helped in that regard), the day-night cycles (with real-time weather effects) and QTE's had an effect on how the story unfolded (although, ultimately, there were only two possible endings), and of course the plot itself had me interested in uncovering the mysteries and progressing the story. Despite both being urban sandbox games, Shenmue felt like a different experience, and one that I ended up finding more preferrable, compared to GTA 3. I'd also have to say Shenmue has aged a lot better than GTA 3, due to GTA 3 being imitated so much, whereas Shenmue still feels fresh because there haven't been that many games like it since.
Metroid. Try playing it now. I dare you. Tell me it's worth any higher than like an 7.5. I will laugh in your face. Cloud_765
I'd say a lot of the 8-bit classics have aged quite badly today, at least compared to most of the 16-bit classics. Still, I wouldn't consider them overrated, but just dated. I can't really say if these games were really overrated for their time unless I was around back then to judge it. But since I was a Sega Master System boy, I never played any of the NES classics until well over a decade later, by which time they felt very dated to me. On the other hand, I can still go back to playing some of the SMS classics and still enjoy them today. Strange.
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