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Comments: 1 +-   Why do games still have levels?-> on Tuesday November 20 2007, @10:46PM a.d.venturer

Submitted by a.d.venturer on Tuesday November 20 2007, @10:46PM
pcgames
a.d.venturer writes "Elite, the Metroid series, Dungeon Siege, God of War I and II, Half-Life (but not Half-Life 2), Shadow of the Colossus, the Grand Theft Auto series; some of the best games ever (and Dungeon Siege) have done away with the level mechanic and created uninterrupted game spaces devoid of loading screens and artificial breaks between periods of play. Much like cut scenes, level loads are anathema to enjoyment of game play, and a throwback to the era of the Vic-20 and Commodore 64 when games were stored on cassette tapes, and memory was measured in kilobytes. So in this era of multi-megabyte and gigabyte memory and fast access storage devices why do we continue to have games that are dominated by the level structure, be they commercial (Portal, Team Fortress 2), independent (Darwinia) and amateur (Nethack, Angband)? Why do games still have levels?"
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  • Think back to the few 'real' halo 3 reviews.
    You can have fancy lights.
    Lots of monsters.
    Or hi res huge worlds.


    You can have ~1.8 of the above on shipping console systems (with not the gigabyte memory).
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