Making peace with liking very few games?
from mohab@piefed.social to games@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 01:48
https://piefed.social/post/355767

I love my favorite games and have been playing them for years, but I disliked about 99% of the games I played.

I don’t think I have FoMO or anything; I just find it weird because my taste in music, film, or art/media in general is usually fairly broad. I guess I just wonder why my taste in games is aggressively limited.

It’s not for the lack of trying new games; I’ve tried more or less anything I could find, sometimes because it’s popular, other times because it looked interesting, but nothing really hits the mark like my favorite games.

I just don’t like what most developers create, I guess?

I’m hoping, by posting this, maybe I can find others who are having a similar experience, and we can share thoughts.

#games

threaded - newest

Zarxrax@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 01:54 next collapse

I’ve found that as I got older, my taste in games has narrowed significantly. I used to be able to play pretty much anything, or especially any popular or critically acclaimed games. But these days I just don’t give a shit about most of what’s out there. I do have certain genres and developers that interest me though, so I know there are occasionally going to be some new games that I really like. And every now and then I might get surprised by something too.

natecox@programming.dev on 04 Dec 02:07 next collapse

I suspect this is a natural result of having much more limited time as we become adults. I used to love all kinds of games too, but today if I feel like a game doesn’t respect my time it gets thrown right onto the “no thanks” pile.

Bronzebeard@lemm.ee on 04 Dec 02:14 next collapse

It’s limited time, but also the selection these last few years has felt very uninspired. Everything is extremely derivative and been done to death.

There was a mass consolidation of developers/publishers recently, on top of further extended development cycles that has really limited any kind of variety we might have seen.

Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 02:25 next collapse

The last few games I was looking forward to have all been pretty disappointing.

Mammothmothman@lemmy.ca on 04 Dec 02:28 next collapse

You can only play reskins of essentially the same game for so long. Not to mention recycling gameplay loops microtransaction hell toxic multiplayer experience (cheating griefing), makes for a minefield of unplesant game experiences. Sticking to what you like and know is how you get enjoyment out of playing.

mesamunefire@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 03:16 collapse

Yep I just go to indies now. The AAA studios feel just samey.

robolemmy@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 02:34 collapse

I’m retired and have basically unlimited time. I still don’t like most games.

say_roguelike_one_more_time_mf.jpg

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 02:08 next collapse

Does it not feel weird sometimes to be disconnected from the gaming zeitgeist? Like, we can obviously still follow news and whatnot, but I'm particularly talking about having no significant emotional investment in contemporary releases—in other words: being disconnected from the hype of announcements and release cycles.

I know people consider this a blessing in this age of hyper-consumerism, but there's a communal aspect to it that I like, and it often feels odd to not be part of it.

KingJalopy@lemm.ee on 04 Dec 02:53 next collapse

Not weird for me. I don’t play anymore at all. Don’t even have a system to do so. But, I watch YouTube videos about games and game facts or speed running every night before bed. I know more about games now than when I actually played them. I just don’t have time for them anymore but that doesn’t mean they don’t interest me. I lost my passion for playing games years ago but not the idea of it. I don’t know or care about the hype but I just find it terribly interesting via others hype or interest in these games. If that makes sense.

fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Dec 03:02 collapse

Like, we can obviously still follow news and whatnot

I stopped following the news first, then largely lost interest in new games after that. After TotalBiscuit passed I haven’t seen a single thing about video game news or reviews. If there’s something I’m interested in I might skim through a review, but that’s the most I do.

nutbutter@discuss.tchncs.de on 04 Dec 02:24 next collapse

I thought I was the only one!

[deleted] on 04 Dec 03:01 collapse

.

Die4Ever@programming.dev on 04 Dec 02:08 next collapse

Which games? Try mods and especially randomizers for them

randomizers.debigare.com

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 02:13 collapse

I mainly play fighting games, action games, and shmups. There's the occasional Atlus/Zachtronics game, but that's it.

I should probably have clarified in my post: I'm not bored of my favorite games. Part of the reason I love them is I find them infinitely replayable.

I just wonder why my taste in games is aggressively narrow, is all.

dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 02:09 next collapse

I don’t think you’re alone in this. I’m kind of becoming the same way, and I figure it’s because as you become older you become wiser, specifically wiser to the way that so many modern games are bullshit now.

Nowadays it seems like almost everything is just a cynical cash grab. And with a lifetime of experience, you know how to spot that bullshit. Oh look, it has always online components. And an in game store. And season content. And gatcha mechanics. And grind. Not only just regular old grind, you know, where you need to level up and be at least be this tall to beat the beef gate (which always has the tantalizing possibility of being able circumvent it by cheesing it or being very clever). No, it’s just grind with no mechanical justification. You must fill the bar before you’re allowed to access this content. Would you like to make a microtransaction to fill the bar faster?

Fuck that, and count me out.

The current fascination is on delivering games as a “service,” and that just rubs me the wrong way. Everything is transient, nothing is permanent, and everyone is making a desperate grab for recurring revenue over creating a compelling experience or indeed anything anyone would ever want to go back to and play again. It’s all just crap designed to feed into people’s sunk cost brains, and it feels like damn near every major title wants to be your full time job.

I have even started eschewing Nintendo titles and some modern indie stuff specifically because they display a complete and utter disrespect for not only the player’s intelligence, but also their time.

Ashtear@lemm.ee on 04 Dec 02:13 next collapse

This is me with current books and music. For books, common styles of prose or an abundance of certain tropes used now simply don’t hit with me, and I’ve even gone back to mid-to-late 20th century books recently to try to avoid all that.

I’d say the best way to try to broaden your taste is to make sure you’re touching on the hits in different genres, and–if you can handle dated gameplay and visuals–to go back and try games from previous generations as well.

xep@fedia.io on 04 Dec 02:14 next collapse

I'm extremely picky, and I'm lucky to have a game I love to bits that's been consistent the last two decades. I don't think it's a bad thing, and I've come to accept it. I still play games socially with my friends, even if I wouldn't have played that game by myself.

I went through the same thing you did, trying games that are popular and finding that I don't enjoy them that much, and then thinking that I've become jaded and no longer enjoy games. However when I do play a game I enjoy I enjoy it very much indeed, so perhaps I'm not jaded after all.

There's no accounting for taste.

Mammothmothman@lemmy.ca on 04 Dec 02:29 next collapse

What game is that?

xep@fedia.io on 04 Dec 04:17 collapse

Monster Hunter.

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 08:34 collapse

I think I agree: it definitely has more to do with knowing what one likes than being jaded.

Hypothetically, if the market is full of games like Monster Hunter, or borrow a lot of ideas from it, would you still not be interested in most games?

xep@fedia.io on 04 Dec 10:33 collapse

I would. I've tried many MH-like games. God Eater, Wild Hearts, Toukiden etc, and find them all enjoyable.

missingno@fedia.io on 04 Dec 02:21 next collapse

I definitely feel like my tastes have narrowed with age. Or maybe it's just that I've found a few games to really really fall in love with, and not much else pulls my attention away from grinding those top favorites.

When I was a kid, I could only get a new game every few months or so, so I kind of had to make the most of each one. Now I've got several hundred games in my Steam library, and more than half of are unplayed, because they don't grab me enough to boot them up over playing another ranked online set of riichi mahjong today.

aedelred@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 02:38 next collapse

I think you just described me exactly. I constantly replay a few specific games but very little grabs my attention like the few I love.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/71e90d46-ae7e-4032-b89e-03a5c16077c7.jpeg">

fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 04 Dec 03:03 collapse

Only 500 hours? I’ve put years of my life into world of warcraft.

altima_neo@lemmy.zip on 04 Dec 02:54 next collapse

I used to buy tons of games and I enjoyed them all. These days I rarely buy any, unless it’s something that’s really got my attention. But I’ve got a ton of old games to play.

ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net on 04 Dec 03:01 next collapse

I have a very similar experience to @Zarxrax@lemmy.world. When I was younger, I’d play just about anything I could get my hands on. But now, it’s like you, where 99% of what’s out there doesn’t interest me.

I think this happened for a few reasons for me:

  1. Games are a pretty big time commitment compared to other media, and my time has only become more valuable as I get older. I’m just not willing to invest it in a game that isn’t really scratching an itch effectively
  2. There are more games out now than ever before in history. Combined with the previous point, there’s never been a better time to be picky.
  3. AAA games are stagnating pretty badly due to profit incentive. While there a still some that break the mold and show artistic value, most of them are so commodified and painfully derivative, it’s difficult for an older gamer who has already played things like it to get excited
  4. I’ve become more attuned to my preferences in genre, and know what I will and will not enjoy, which is something I didn’t have as much when I was younger, since everything was still relatively new and therefore, interesting enough to play.

But this last one is the biggest reason for me: games are not reaching the potential they have locked within them.

I say that as someone who is a massive fan of storytelling, good writing, and immersion in games. Compared to books and movies, writers are still given extremely low priority in the gaming industry, which results in a tremendous amount of cognitive dissonance, simplistic writing, and a lack of innovative gameplay inspired by said writing.

Indies have been the most willing to experiment, but that’s mostly with pure mechanics or themes, and writing is still often neglected.

There have been a few titles that I think reach that potential, but most of them are quite old now. With so few to truly tickle me in that way, I’ll instead opt for arcade type games that manage to create a tight gameplay loop, as it let’s me not lament the lack of a good story so much.

ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 04:03 collapse

There have been a few titles that I think reach that potential, but most of them are quite old now.

Don’t leave us hanging! Quality endures the ages, well, mostly.

ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net on 04 Dec 05:00 collapse

Personally, I would say:

  • Thief 1, 2 & 3
  • Indiana Jones and The Fate of Atlantis
  • Mafia 1 (not the remake)
  • Gemini Rue
  • Deus Ex (Game Dungeon has a great video on why the story punches so high, link to relevant segment here)
  • Disco Elysium (even though I personally didn’t really care for the game due to the setting, the writing is undeniably high quality)
  • A Mind Forever Voyaging

All of those games have, IMO, a tremendously good sync between gameplay and story, where everything lines up to the point where you can become fully absorbed into whatever experience the writer/designer crafted. I would say Thief accomplishes it the best, while Mafia’s and Deus Ex’s clunky gameplay hold them back, but I can see what they were trying to achieve, and overall are close enough to my ideal.

ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 07:07 collapse

That’s a fun mix, Gemini Rue was a pleasant surprise to see!

You might also enjoy Primordia given that.

ProdigalFrog@slrpnk.net on 04 Dec 07:30 collapse

Oddly enough I actually pre-ordered a physical copy of Primordia, and got a ways into it before stopping for some reason. I should really go back and finish it!

robocall@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 03:10 next collapse

I still enjoy playing rollercoaster tycoon and have been playing it since I was… 10 years old.

I’ve played other games over the years but put 1000 hours of game time into them. I think it’s abnormal to constantly chasing and trying new games.

TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org on 04 Dec 05:08 collapse

Yep. I still do challenges to see how many customers I can get to puke on one ride.

robocall@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 05:11 collapse

“I want to get off Mr Bones wild ride”

acosmichippo@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 03:11 next collapse

I think my tastes have remained mostly the same, it’s the industry that is losing me as a customer for two reasons:

  1. more and more games now are based on shit that I hate - multiplayer, GaaS, micro transactions, copy and paste gameplay mechanics with new coats of paint, etc.

  2. studios that used to make my favorite games have really gone downhill over the last decade, like Bethesda, Bioware, and maybe CDPR (hopefully the cp2077 release was just a fluke but we’ll see).

ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 04:01 collapse

maybe CDPR (hopefully the cp2077 release was just a fluke but we’ll see).

Cyberpunk 2077 was Witcher 1 repeat tbh, people forgot Witcher 1 was a mess at launch since they patched it up a bunch and some other stuff to try to make amends

stardust@lemmy.ca on 04 Dec 03:11 next collapse

Should be happy to have less things trying to convince you to spend money. Being able to enjoy a few games is an absolute financial win.

ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 03:57 next collapse

Saw where you mentioned being into fighting games, action games, & shmups, so I wonder which games you find yourself bouncing off of more.

Along with reasons other have mentioned that are similar to my own (many games demanding a lot of time, better finding what games really click with me, etc.), I’ve also been put off by other details (hyper-monetization, big budget photorealistic & cinematic styles, etc.). Personally it’s less being into very few games, and more being into more specific kinds of game design and creative style, which are sometimes harder to find.

Like not being into drawn out progression systems immediately narrows one’s options pretty significantly, especially among many recent games.

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 08:56 collapse

Oh, absolutely. It probably has a lot to do with falling out of favor with current design and monetization trends, I agree.

Some of the games I've been playing for years: Guilty Gear, Under Night In-Birth, Bayonetta, The Wonderful 101, Crimzon Clover, Smash TV, and Catherine.

Which games do you keep going back to?

ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 22:22 collapse

Mainly games built for replaying, so arcade puzzlers like Super Hexagon/Tetris Effect/Mixolumia/Equaline/etc, roguelikes such as FTL/BrogueCE/etc, or strangesims like Powder Toy or Vilmonic. Although even with those it’s more occasional, like when I’m uncertain of what I’m wanting to do.

Elgenzay@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 05:00 next collapse

Do you play indie games often? Most of my favorite gaming experiences have come from indie studios. They put more love into them

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 09:05 collapse

I try them often, but haven't had much luck finding a favorite other than Crimzon Clover. Nex Machina and Furi got close, but not quite.

Some experiences were nice, but not replayable, which ruled them out as a favorite for me, like Hyper Light Drifter.

Some I had some fun with, but took issue with some of the design choices, like Dead Cells and Hollow Knight.

Some I outright did not enjoy at all like Hades or Stardew Valley.

Most recent indie game that got close for me was Kill Knight.

What are some of your favorite indies?

Elgenzay@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 18:53 collapse

I recommend CrossCode, if you haven’t tried it. It’s a top-down twinstick shooter/fighter so the gameplay is comparable to some of those you’ve listed and the story is long and unforgettable, with tons of fun optional content. Probably my favorite game narrative; there’s nothing like it.

Some other favorites of mine are Revita, but there’s little in terms of story, and Outer Wilds, but it’s a slow burn. And if you’re looking for games to play with friends, these are some of my favorite multiplayer indie games:

  • Deep Rock Galactic
  • Roboquest
  • Gunfire Reborn
  • Don’t Starve Together
  • Risk of Rain 2

(Also Starbound, Terraria, & Core Keeper but those are bigger time investments)

Carnelian@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 05:02 next collapse

Lots of people have replied with similar experiences.

But personally? I’m having the time of my life currently playing tons of new games. I love trying new ones and getting surprised, and maybe falling in love with a genre I hadn’t considered before.

I feel totally contrary to what others are saying: as I’ve gotten older, I find myself enjoying games way more. My time is more valuable to me now than ever before, so I want to fill it with things that are joyful and meaningful. Often those things are art. Games to me have always been very special in the way they can deliver a powerful artistic experience.

I think they also have a special power to be blatant disgusting soulless cash grabs, to be fair. As the years go by I feel like many aspects of the industry have become particularly unpalatable. But many studios are still releasing good games, and so far I’ve continued to find joy in seeking them out.

Not too many people on this post are actually listing games. So, in no particular order, here are some games I absolutely adored that I played recently. Games from the last ~year that have touched and moved me in some way. Experiences I don’t think I’ll forget.

Sable
Chicory: A colorful tale
Manifold Garden
Signalis
OneShot
The Talos Principle
Night in the Woods
Citizen Sleeper
Webbed
Rusted Moss
Armored Core VI
Iron Lung
Slay the Princess
Ghostrunner
Mundaun
Crosscode
Eastward
Animal Well
Pseudoregalia
Dave the Diver
Nine Sols
Patrick’s Parabox
Cocoon
Smushi Come Home

Not to imply that I expect you or anyone else to take a deep look here or to try any of these games. Just wanted to throw my perspective out there, and to show the games in concrete terms that have left an impression and continue to motivate me to keep looking and keep trying more

Famko@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 06:49 next collapse

Have you tried Outer Wilds by any chance? Seems like the kind of game you would enjoy.

Carnelian@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 13:37 collapse

Yea! An all time favorite, but I played it a long time ago. I wanted to keep my little list just to recent games. Irl I am very annoying about recommending OW to everyone, as well as its dlc which continued to blow me away

Famko@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 21:30 collapse

I also recently played through In Stars and Time so I recommend that as well considering you were into Slay the Princess.

ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 07:04 next collapse

obligatory but entirely sincere addition for those looking for palate cleansing games: Outer Wilds

and for those after a variety of others, in particularly no order, that may or may not come up as much:


But this is all from a flipside of a flipside, so each is as likely to appeal as repel, quick slide to catch clicks and clunks

Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works on 04 Dec 11:12 next collapse

God, Outer Wilds is one of the most incredible gaming experiences I have ever had.

Unforeseen@sh.itjust.works on 04 Dec 13:38 next collapse

I have been firing up The Powder Toy for well over a decade to kill time during meetings

Carnelian@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 13:42 collapse

Now this is a list! Thank you, based on the few I have played here I can’t wait to check out the rest

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 08:51 collapse

I love that you're having a different experience! This is exactly why I posted about this: I have found that my taste in almost everything else has become broader as I aged, so I was wondering what's the deal with my uncharacteristically narrow taste in video games.

Sadly, I tried most of the games on your list, and found out they're not for me. I'll try the rest though! Thank you for taking the time to list them.

proceduralnightshade@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 06:57 next collapse

Limit Internet usage and avoid games and other entertainment for a few days, then go on itch.io and just play whatever. Not because it looks cool, not because it’s popular. Just anything.

tomi000@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 08:12 collapse

Whats gonna happen?

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 08:37 collapse

Not to rain on that particular advice—it may actually work for others, I obviously do not know—but I did try that at some point, and got bored really quickly.

For anyone who hasn't tried it, I recommend doing it just to find out if you feel or notice anything interesting.

proceduralnightshade@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 09:01 collapse

I usually only find like 2-3 interesting games out of 200, but the ones I did find were pretty sweet. Sometimes you’re not lucky and exclusively play trash.

I mainly enjoy 2 types of games, ones with replayabilty (Stellaris, Rimworld, Slay The Spire, Roguelites in General, some RPGs) and short to medium single player games which I usually only play once. If you don’t like the second category, my recommendation is definitely the wrong approach, yeah

lemon@sh.itjust.works on 04 Dec 07:58 next collapse

Eh, I get it. There’s an overwhelming abundance of choice that’s growing faster than the average time it takes to form a connection with any one game. Why deal with the FOMO and misbuys if you know what works for you.

That doesn’t stop me from purchasing way too many (non-refundable) indie titles on the Switch, though. And I’m glad to say some of those feel like they’ll keep me hooked for a good while.

Still, nothing can ever top my love for one classic game in particular: AOE 1 (definitive edition). Why? (It’s unfair to the rest.) Years ago I used to play against my dad over LAN. It’s some of the most fun we had together. Standing outside while he took a smoke break mid-game, I’d explain how I was about to wipe his whole civilization off the map in ways he couldn’t possibly imagine. Sometimes when I miss him, firing up AOE lets me feel closer to him again.

All this to say, nostalgia is a tough bar for any new game to beat.

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 08:29 collapse

That's so sweet bonding with your dad over that game. May you retain that memory forever ❤️

I'm with you. The concept of gaming as a disposable medium never really worked for me either. The idea of going through my wishlist like it's a watchlist—beating a game only to move on to the next was just never really for me.

If I don't think a game is built to be organically replayable, I'll probably just lose interest in buying it.

tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip on 04 Dec 21:44 collapse

I wonder what separates games from movies as disposable media, especially with games that are meant to be cinematic/telling a story. Like Spec Ops is loosely based on Heart of Darkness and has a strong narrative, but without that is just a sort of middling shooter. So once you know the story it doesn’t have a ton of replayability, but it’s still impactful in the way a good movie is.

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 23:22 collapse

Hmm… I think it's definitely a spectrum. Even arcade games have stories. It's not what drives them, but they still do.

When you start considering something like Bandersnatch, the spectrum gets even wider.

intensely_human@lemm.ee on 04 Dec 08:02 next collapse

Which games?

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 08:44 collapse

I'm mainly into fighting games (Guilty Gear, Under Night), action games (Bayonetta, God Gand), and shmups (Crimzon Clover, Ketsui)

I'll occasionally like an Atlus game (Catherine) or a Zachtronics game (Shenzhen I/O) but that's about it.

What are your favorites?

midnightspire@mastodon.gamedev.place on 04 Dec 02:44 next collapse

@mohab Eh. I like what I like, which is relatively narrow, and the major industry quit catering to me 30 years ago. Luckily indies picked up the torch that AAA threw away.

mohab@piefed.social on 04 Dec 08:41 collapse

Ah, man, I feel the same. I like some indie titles, but haven't run into anything I could add to my favorites except Crimzon Clover World EXplosion. Nex Machina and Furi got really close too.

What are some of your favorites?

jordanlund@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 09:42 next collapse

I find the same thing, but I’m really questioning the taste of others.

Never really did PC gaming, bought a SteamDeck to get into that ecosystem after seeing all the posts about “ZOMG! STEAM SALE!!!”

Are people just… not discerning? Do you just buy ANYTHING because it’s on sale?

The signal to noise ratio on Steam is just nuts to me… Yeah, some game might be $1.99, 90% off, but if it’s not worth the bandwidth to download, why are you bothering? Do you lack the ability to tell good games from bad games?

Gradually_Adjusting@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 10:41 next collapse

We don’t really teach appreciation of art enough. People unabashedly “hate watch” shows or go out to see blatant cash grabs in theatre, and buy games they don’t enjoy…

I’ve had arguments with friends who defend shows they admit have no redeeming value, and are only watching it because there’s a lot of it. Like there’s a hole in them that can only be filled with sufficient volumes of content. I can’t even talk to them anymore.

Art is in a way the study of choice. To simply make things without meaning anything by them, without doing anything on purpose except to make money, to me is little more than cheap nihilism - without adding to the conversation in the way that considered nihilism can.

A few game makers actually do contribute to the conversation of games as art, following on what came before and enriching us with new ideas. Those few should be followed closely and supported, when you find them.

jordanlund@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 11:34 collapse

And then there’s…

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/239a96f6-f7a4-40b2-b8c3-39e9a198dee7.jpeg">

82% Positive? Are you shitting me?

ChairmanMeow@programming.dev on 04 Dec 11:40 next collapse

82% positive just means that out of everyone who decided to buy it in the first place, 82% feel like they got what they expected. If you don’t expect greatness, then perhaps this game is exactly what you thought it’d be.

Gradually_Adjusting@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 13:26 collapse

… Maybe it’s in the tradition of Magritte? “This is not a game.”

deus@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 11:01 next collapse

The thing is, there’s just so much stuff on Steam that even if you only care about the crème de la crème (hell, even if you only care about a specific genre), you’ll still find yourself with a wishlist longer than you’ll possibly have the time to play. I often go “ZOMG! STEAM SALE!!!” so in my case it’s slowly becoming a backlog but I do intend to play everything I buy.

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 20:52 collapse

This you?

Wrong comment

Gamerman153@lemmynsfw.com on 04 Dec 10:52 next collapse

Does anyone need anything besides rimworld and factorio??

mholiv@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 11:16 next collapse

Strong recommend for Satisfactory. It’s first person factorio but in a beautiful world that isn’t all brown.

Personally I think it’s better.

caut_R@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 11:25 next collapse

Counterpoint: Building something big in first person is a lot more bothersome than in 2D/topdown

I have Satisfactory and like it btw, I‘m just saying it‘s something to keep in mind. It‘s also a lot heavier on the hardware, obviously.

mholiv@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 13:17 collapse

Fair, Satisfactory is a lot heavier on the hardware for sure. But it’s a first person 3D game with a much bigger emphasis on beauty.

I find top down to be less interesting. I like to build factories in 3D with many vertical manufacturing layers in addition to spreading out horizontally. I think 3D factories is a more fun challenge. To each their own though. They’re both interesting games.

MajorHavoc@programming.dev on 04 Dec 19:28 next collapse

Yeah. If Satisfactory every gets SteamDeck verified, I may never play anything else again.

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 20:48 collapse

Dyson Sphere Program is 3rd person 3-D and it has combat these days. I’m actually wondering what they haven’t implemented yet, since it’s still early access AFAIA.

AMillionMonkeys@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 15:35 next collapse

Dwarf Fortress? Go hard or go home.

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 20:51 collapse

Dyson Sphere Program. 64 stars and hundreds of planets per game! 640 Dyson Shells to construct and defend.

tburkhol@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 10:59 next collapse

There’s no wrong or right way to enjoy games, and so many ways to find enjoyment in those games. Some people love the novelty, or the stories, graphics, music…

Based on the favorites you’ve mentioned, I feel like you really enjoy specific mechanics or the physical experience/practice of the game. Back in the day, I could spend hours running through Diablo 2, and that was entirely based on button mashing and running. Something about its pacing, interface, and the match of its challenge with my coordination just hit exactly right - difficult enough to be rewarding, easy enough that repeatedly dying didn’t frustrate me, and always another fight just seconds away. I played that for years.

Now that game launchers track my time, it’s really obvious that I like certain games for their mechanics - mostly Skyrim & Fallout - other games for sandbox/crafting - Valheim, Rimworld, X4 - hundreds of hours in each, even though I’ll try other games, at least long enough to finish their stories, once. Sometimes just because I paid for it & feel obligated to get to the end. It’s OK to have favorites.

caut_R@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 11:28 next collapse

I realized that I need a certain amount of time with a game to warm up to it or else I‘m always drawn back to known quantities. Seems like playing things I know is just more comfortable. I also realized that I really like racing games for a similar reason: I don‘t have to learn anything new about the mechanics/game, I just have to drive.

Odd_so_Star_so_Odd@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 11:57 next collapse

You see a new game as an investment. Nothing wrong with that. There’s different genres to games and once you’ve explored them it can be hard to put up with something you feel you’ve already played and that one of your favorites did better. You’re probably at the point where you’d have more fun playing with friends / exploring an mmo. Stay curious and be bold.

BuboScandiacus@mander.xyz on 04 Dec 12:01 next collapse

I have the same thing but with music

I have a single “like” playlist with ~30 songs and 3/4 of those are only different covers/ arrangements of the same 3 songs

AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 20:59 collapse
TheBat@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 12:39 next collapse

I myself get bored of the games quickly, imo. I guess when I feel like devs are ‘cheating’ I lose interest.

Some examples:

Batman Arkham Asylum: Gave up I got to Killer Croc level. Didn’t like how the stealth/action game turned into precision platformer.

Batman Arkham City: Stopped at Mr. Freeze level. I looked up how to beat him and turns out I had to follow specific moves to defeat him. Ain’t got time for that tbh.

Spider-man: Stopped at Rhino + Scorpion level. Again with getting Rhino to headbutt a wall, under heavy load to drop it on him to stun him and beat him up? Bye.

Life Goes On: Gave up on a level where timing was crucial. Until that point I focused on steps to solve the puzzle but at this stage, even though I knew what to do, timing was too important and I haven’t got those reflexes or patience to replay the level again and again.

Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works on 04 Dec 13:08 next collapse

This just means you’re figuring out what you like, and refusing to force yourself to enjoy trash.

Remember, 90% of anything is shit, and of that 10%, not all of it is going to appeal to your tastes.

On top of that, AAA gaming is a fucking wasteland right now. Publishers have squeezed all the life out of the medium in search of ongoing profit bonanzas. I can’t remember the last time I enjoyed a AAA game, unless we count Cyberpunk which had the benefit of being self published, so I don’t really think that counts.

Oh, my bad, Elden Ring would definitely count as AAA. That was awesome (still need to finish it, and the DLC). But let’s be real, Elden Ring is great because it’s so different from the vast majority of the open world games out there.

Anyway, I mostly spend my time on mid-shelf, indie and self-published stuff, and even then the number of games I like is pretty small. My main go tos are Darktide, Warframe, Insurgency, Chivalry 2, The Finals (I guess that’s kind of mainstream?), Stellaris, and Total War Warhammer. I’ve also recently enjoyed VA-11-Hall-A, Slay The Princess, Shadows of Doubt, and Space Marine 2. Those were all pretty great.

I like that a lot of games get more long term support now. That’s really cool. It’s fun to be able to keep coming back to a game I like and finding new stuff.

But yeah, you don’t owe it to anyone to enjoy everything, and you owe it to yourself to not waste your time on things you don’t enjoy.

celeste@kbin.earth on 04 Dec 13:50 next collapse

I don't think there's anything wrong with it. The genres I like keep getting new games, but if most games now were precision platformers or MMORPGs, I'd read more lol.

Just try to hold back the good ol days mentality, try new stuff if it catches your interest, and let yourself enjoy your 10000th replay of your favorites? You aren't against new things entirely, after all. You just don't make yourself play games you don't like. Somewhere out there is an indie developer with similar taste, also frustrated they can't find a game they want to play, and I hope you find them and add a new game to your list.

KingThrillgore@lemmy.ml on 04 Dec 14:12 next collapse

I ended playing Deus Ex for the 10th time last week and I realized there’s not many big budget titles that I like that shipped past 2017. The attention to detail, system complexity, and writing quality is just not there anymore. Its all slop. The last one that I can even remember with any fondness…is Arkane’s Prey. Well that’s not true, I dig Metaphor ReFantazio’s (sic) art style. But I’ve played JRPGs.

I think the AAAs are cooked, folks. But Indies? Have you heard of Mouthwashing? Empires of the Undergrowth? Satisfactory? Those are my timesinks and what sticks in my mind the longest.

TheV2@programming.dev on 04 Dec 15:51 next collapse

That sounds wonderful to me, as long as you have fun with your favorite games and the other content. You save a lot of money and, more importantly, time.

RubberElectrons@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 16:41 next collapse

It’s ok dude. What do you look for in games, is there a common theme?

I’m the same, I actually look for cinematic games with clever, interesting stories. Idgaf about multiplayer or any of that shit, I want to be a director in my own movie.

Bioshock, half life 2, LA Noire, and so on.

aesthelete@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 22:22 collapse

You like horizon? I played the first one and thought the story was pretty good. Maybe not like Bioshock level, but better than most games of the type.

RubberElectrons@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 22:36 collapse

Never played actually. I’ll check it out. I don’t have much free time generally as I work on a lot of projects, so I usually look for really good stories if I’m going to invest my time.

I’ll take a look though, thanks for the suggestion.

aesthelete@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 23:22 collapse

Sure, no problem. Hope you like it.

TheFriar@lemm.ee on 04 Dec 16:58 next collapse

I’m the same way. I just want to live in those stories until I’ve played them and replayed them so much that the feeling goes away. Currently: cyberpunk.

Grangle1@lemm.ee on 04 Dec 18:55 next collapse

You have a narrow taste in games and that’s perfectly OK, nothing to be ashamed of at all. Enjoy what you like. You have no obligation whatsoever to play the newest, most popular thing just to keep up with the gaming Joneses. The list of popular games I haven’t tried myself is MUCH longer than the list of them I have played, either because they don’t appeal to me or I just don’t have the spare time or money, and I am 100% fine with that. I buy the games I know I’ll put time into and enjoy and don’t worry about the rest.

FuryMaker@lemmy.world on 04 Dec 21:48 collapse

I find it’s not that I don’t like them, it’s just a decent commitment to get into it.