Games I was disappointed by; Project Conundrum, the only conundrum being how it so abjectly failed to use its sole interesting mechanic well, and Lords of the Fallen, which has mostly been Lords of the Falling Through the Level or Crashing to Desktop.
@vanvir1 Well I agree with you. I think the game does feel like a single player MMO, but the content is, for the most part, very well thought through, and the systems connect it all into the campaign in a way I find satisfying. I like that though there is alot to do, you need not do things you don't find interesting (I basically ignored the side quests in entire areas if it didn't appeal to me), you'll still be able to rack up power doing things you like. I got the game Monday and have almost 40 hours so far, and I'm finding it by far the most engaging Bioware game yet.
@videogamer008 Other peoples impressions and opinions can be valuable sources of information, but to follow too closely those of people whose desires and expectations will rarely be the same as ours can lead to missing out on experiences that are personally rewarding. Well said, VG.
I've never found GTA to be a particularly engaging series. And with GTAV, playing at a friends house, I found myself quickly bored of it. Since I first heard that a first-person camera was been implemented, I have waxed and waned over whether it may be a significant enough shift in perspective that I may enjoy being in that world, at least for longer than usual. After seeing this insight from Danny I think it is much more likely that I'll pick up the game once it hits the PC next year.
@TeknoBug You can't count Steam as example of how everything has to be online, and then immediately tell the truth and admit it works offline, which it does for basically every game.
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