Staff writer Zack Wheat explores the gaming industry's turn towards dramatic, dark games, and advocates a return to lighter, or at the very least less shockingly grim, fare.
Former Rockstar Games Technical Director Obbe Vermeij has finally revealed why some planes would randomly crash in GTA: San Andreas.
This fly by feature was on the cutting room floor due to the random plane crashes and it's one of those things I'm so thankful made it into the final version as these random fly by and crashes make the world seem more alive on the extremely limited PS2 hardware you needed everything you could possibly get in a open world to convey that feeling.
And accross hundreds of hours of gameplay I probably died around 3 times as a result of these fly by failures but I loved every time it happened
It made the world feel more human, and honestly kinda insane that even today with all these open world games, almost no one can capture that like R* even when compared to their ps2 games
Lol, I remember those. I vaguely remember dying from one crashing into my car once too.
Game Rant chats with the creator of No More Heroes about who he would like to see play the role of Travis Touchdown in a live-action adaptation.
Actually Ryan Gosling makes a ton of sense.
Edit: If this can be done in a Scott Pilgrim movie kind of way that would be dope.
Ahmed from eXputer writes "Video game leaks have become a major cause of concern for Triple-A studios, as they're becoming increasingly malicious and dangerous."
I'm happy that R* and other studios are making serious type of games with emotion and mature story telling...
Because 90% are shitty modern shooters-__- *sigh*.
Games can be serious and still be fun. But I understand what you mean though. Despite God of War being bloody and violent, it still didn't take itself to seriously. God of War's dark humor was sprinkled throughout the game. Like when Kratos grabbed the key instead of the guy and let him fall or Icarus jumping on his back making him fall, the guy coming back as one of the Barbarian King's souls, using Helios's head as a lantern or using the guy's body to prop open the switch when he was fighting the Kraken.
Because most games aren't just pick up and play, pure gameplay experiences. Don't get me wrong, I LOVE the serious, story-driven, cinematic adventures. But we don't have games like Donkey Kong that often anymore. Games where you can just jump right in and have fun with a smile on your face.
The challenge is completely removed in a lot of games in order to appeal a broader audience. Steep learning curves are frowned upon now. There's no money to be made.