60°

Video Games are Better Without the Hype

Sometimes you can appreciate games more the less you know about it.

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unrealitymag.com
GeofferyPeterson3556d ago

Yeah, what ever happened to letting the gamers drum up the hype of a good game after it has been released?

3-4-53556d ago

Back in the 90's, for the most part, you heard about a game or saw a commercial & within 2-3 weeks you coul;d play that game.

You didn't get overhyped because you didn't even know it existed until there was an ad on tv or your friend had the game.

* You got to be like " omg I want this now!"
- But you COULD ACTUALLY have it almost "now".

All the waiting leaves room for talking yourself out of liking something or nitpicking and finding things "wrong" with a game that aren't really there.

* If I KNOW I'm going to like a game, then I get the minimal amount of info as possible and just wait until release day.

EX: When I bought my 3DS in 2012, I hadn't even known of Dragon Quest 9's existence.

I read about it, saw some screenshots, and bought it the next day and LOVED that game.

There wasn't time to pick it apart and second guess.

* With Dragon Quest 7 3DS, all this waiting might ending making the game seem not as good because I wanted to play it for so long.

You don't want hype to wear out it's welcome.

Breakline3555d ago

Totally agreed. This approach can leave you in the dark on a few things, especially in online games, but it restores the wonder and thrill of seeing/feeling/playing that new game for the first time. It's a great feeling.

christian hour3555d ago (Edited 3555d ago )

Totally agree'd, games would come out a few weeks after youve heard about em sometimes,(though when you're a kid in the 90's, those weeks can seem like months when you have no true concept of time or age) ESPECIALLY if you weren't picking up monthly gaming magazines or trying to find what tidbits you could on fan sites in the crazy wild world that was the internet in the late 90's.

I remember spending 4 hours on dial up trying to view a horrible 320p video for Final Fantasy 8, only got to buffer 10 seconds of it but to me that was amazing. To my parents and the phone bill they had to pay... noooot so much :)

I used to get myself into hesterics waiting for games. Especially in the late 90's early 00's when it could be months to a year before you'd hear anything about a game.

I'm pretty sure I went through 3-4 years of secondary level education while waiting for Snake Eater, nearly tore my hair out. And those 18 minute long E3 trailers theyd show off every year (I'd get them in game magazine discs cos internet sucked back then, 56k was the standard in europe :P) killed me.

Or the previous months issue teasing that next month you'd get a trailer for a game you hadnt seen anythign of in 2 years, and then waiting in suspense every day, checking your local newsagents, just in case it came in early. HELL!

I think after Final Fantasy XII I officially stopped getting on the hype train for games and just decided to stick to watching a trailer once then occupying myself with life until it releases, these days I focus my time more on happenings in the industry and the development side of things.

Oh, actually I lied, I was off the hype train for games until I seen No Mans Sky. It brought it all back, the giddy kid inside me just couldnt shut up once it got wind of that game. I literally watch No Mans Sky trailers almost every day.

*edit*

I just remembered the wait for halo 2 as well. God damn. That e3 reveal trailer (that was nothing liek the finished product) is still fresh in my mind, I can remember the first time I heard the audience cheer when he took out that second bullet hose, or when he started sprinting (a feature that never made it in to the series until halo 4).

theshredded3556d ago (Edited 3556d ago )

yeah,bought Dark Souls and Far Cry 3 blindly and they ended up being some of my favorite games

kewlkat0073556d ago

Question: So who really creates the HYPE?

-Devs talking about thier games very early..

-Game site say this is the next coming...

-Fanboys saying ooohhh..ahhhh at every article with the slightest soundbite, till the game is out...

It's all a cycle..

christian hour3555d ago

Yup it's a bit of everything, after a while you kind of notice the patterns and learn how to sift through the bullshit to find the credible stuff, and then come release day should be mature and independant enough to make your own impression of the game seperate from all the hype and build up you've witnessed in the upcoming months.

Halo 2 is the first game I can remember really having a massively huge ad campaign and hype train, cumulating with the ILB ARG.

And for 10 years since, every Tom, Dick and Haribo has been trying to emulate the marketing campaign, to the point where you can get presently surprised when a studio like Rocksteady decides to wait at least a year before their games release until showing off their new game (arkham knight for the uninformed)

That was so refreshing for me, and I commend Rocksteady for being so careful and passionate about their game, its a much better tactic than the usual 2 years build up for 1 weeks worth of on off gaming come release, and hopefully we start to see this trend becoming more popular.

Macdaddy713556d ago

Oh no they can't let a game sell it self, they can't claim a game cost 3 million to make if they don't spend 1.5 million on ads!!!! So they can make the game cost more then it really did

christian hour3555d ago

Yeah it's kinda scary when you see the budget of the physical game next to the budget of the marketing campaign. Didn't they know people advertise your stuff for free on the internet now? :P

SteamPowered3556d ago

Social media pretty much took the fun out of everything nowadays. We are just learning the price of instant knowledge.
Its like knowing what your going to get for Christmas in July.

christian hour3555d ago

Nice and concise and right on point, and really hammers home what everyone is trying to say in here. Bubbles to you, good sir!

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70°

EKWB reportedly plagued with financial disarray many gaming pc's left without parts

EK Cooling allegedly has slipped itself into a hot soup of seemingly endless financial woes, where it has not paid its staff, suppliers, and contractors for many months as the company is facing liquidity problems and a surplus of inventory left unsold, stuck in the warehouse for a more extended period. Gamers Nexus investigated these claims made by former and current personnel, where he found trails of unpaid bills lasting as long as three to four months and unpaid raises that accumulated for almost a year.

EK Water Blocks has two entities—a Slovenian-based headquarters and a US-based subsidiary, EK Cooling Solutions. Steve narrated the series of events in detail, stating that the company was reportedly irresponsible and negligent regarding payment. Consequently, partners and employees are forced to share the burden of alleged mismanagement. It all begins with its extensive range of products, leading to a surplus of goods. EK has over 230 water blocks, 40 liquid cooling kits, 85 reservoirs, 40 pumps, 73 radiators, and 212 miscellaneous accessories.

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tomshardware.com
just_looken1d 16h ago (Edited 1d 16h ago )

Yes this is not about video games directly but indirectly this will impact the pc gaming/workstation space hard.

This company is massive one of two in the water cool space so if it goes poof then thousands out there have no spare parts or half built computers.

SO yeah i know not about a video game but think of it as amd leaving the pc space but this is ekwb that could be leaving water cooling in the pc space

Jayz2cents a supporter of there products also has issues
https://www.youtube.com/wat...

60°

Indie hit Dredge is getting its own movie adaptation

Rob Webb of KnowTechie writes: We're still waiting on the details, but this video game adaptation promises to be seriously creepy.

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knowtechie.com
70°

The INDIE Live Expo 2024 event is to feature over 100 game titles

INDIE Live Expo, Japan’s premiere online digital showcase series , will debut never-before-seen games & content updates across more than 100 titles on May 25th.