[QUOTE="S0lidSnake"]
[QUOTE="CarnageHeart"]
I've been fine with the extended generation. There are still a ton of fun and interesting games hitting (think X-Com, Far Cry 3, Ni No Kuni, Journey and The Walking Dead).
Its also worth keeping in mind that unlike the old days the future isn't teasing us from some other place. Arcades are dead and nobody makes console type games which seek to use the prodigious power of modern PCs so there is effect no one to show us what we're missing.
Shame-usBlackley
Well, we've seen glimpses of the future in the demos for Star Wars 1313, Watchdogs, FF Agni's Philiosphy and MGS Ground Zeroes demo. And yes, we wont know what we are missing until ALL devs show us what their vision is.
I dont blame you guys for being content with playing on inferior hardware. Hell, we have multiple Wii threads going on right now where Nintendo fans are defending nintendo putting out last gen hardware again and again. Sadly, it's a fact that the video game industry is one industry that needs an upgrade every five to six years or gaming gets left behind. Now the developers are forced to develop on hardware from 2005, and the end result is a safe, extremely boring and predictable array of sequels that has resulted in the industry sales dropping heavily three years in a row. For any other industry, that would've been a wake up call, but here we had M$ being content to rake in profit for two years instead of actually moving the industry forward. Same goes for Sony, although they only delayed it for a year. But had they stuck with their original plan of releasing the PS4 in 2012, we would've seen God of War Acsension, The Last of Us and Beyond on the PS4. And as good as those games look right now, I can promise you their vision has been severely hampered by developing on this antique hardware.
Lots of people are content with playing the same Halo 4, the same Gears of War, the same Assassin's Creed year after year. But those people are the reason why we are in 2013 and the only next gen console we have right now is the Wii U.
I agree, I mean, even in shltty games like Aliens: Colonial Marines, the visuals on the PC are so much better than the consoles it's not even funny. I just find it odd to hear people petitioning to hold back technological advancement when this generation has gone on three years beyond the average accepted life cycle for console tech. I just don't see the logic behind it. At all.Because I've enjoyed games released in the past few years you're comparing me to Nintendo fans :P? X-com is a franchise that has been dead since the 90's. There was nothing safe or predicatable about its sequel. Neither Ni No Kuni nor The Walking Dead are sequels (nor was either of them 'safe'). I acknowledge that hardware power is a tide that lifts many boats (allowing for linear and radical improvement in game design) but static hardware isn't the reason for (the usual, perpetual) me-tooism that is the guiding philosophy of many games. Gamer conservatism and designer timidity are to blame for that. Yearly iterations of many popular non-sports franchises are a new reality which new hardware isn't going to change.
I am as excited about anyone about the new hardware as anyone because I recognize that technology is a rising tide that can lift all boats and that some designers will use the power given to them by new hardware in radical ways that enhance the game experience (even linear improvement to stuff like AI, level geometry, framerate, physics, special effects and enemy count will be quite cool) but as I've said to Nintendo defenders who stated with sincerity that they believe that new controllers will make for new games, at the end of the day, hardware only opens up possibilities. What matters most are people.
Throughout my almost 36 years of gaming most designers have been conservative. That won't change, though as always the industry will change and improve due to the linear improvements of the conservative designers, the radical improvements of the bold minority, and the willingness of conservatives designers to borrow successful concepts from the bold minority.
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