How Not To Buy Crap Games This Season 143
The Guardian Gamesblog has a short guide on avoiding bad games and helping the games industry. From the article: "Say no to film and TV tie-ins - These are generally belted out in nine months by newcomers treated little better than sweatshop workers. If you're fed the line, 'the director was fully involved in the making of this game', beware. This means, roughly, 'The director sent his lawyers to the studio with a 300-page guide, warning that if it were breached, the team would be shot.'"
Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:4, Insightful)
Even though Spiderman 2 and The Incredible Hulk were both really awesome games? This sounds like crummy advice.
Here's what I do: never buy a game until you're read some good reviews. NOT previews, which are always suspiciously glowing. After getting burned buying a few $50 games the first day they came out, I stick hard and fast to this rule.
Even then sometimes I wait a year or so until they're $20 at Wal-mart.
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2, Informative)
The best advice you could ever get for purchasing games is (assuming you know what kind of games you like to play):
- Read reviews. Not just one review from Gamespot or IGN (I find their reviews to be garbage more often than not), but from other places as well. Try a site you
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:1)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2, Informative)
Personally, I hardly ever need to check reviews by the time a PC game has hit stores. I'll know way before that point if I'm interested in buying or not. Everything gets preview'd beforehand. If somehow a stinker slips by me and onto my PC, I'll return it if possible and get my money
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:5, Interesting)
Everybody knows about gamerankings.com and I think a lot of people put too much stock in them.
The problem is review scores - even aggregated ones - tell you nothing. Reviewers often get so caught up in hype themselves that they can't (or won't) see a game's faults, and of course there's the issue of paid advertising at almost every publication. That's not to say reviews themselves are useless, but just looking at a score - even an average of the scores from a bunch of publications - is not going to tell you anything.
But for some of the same reasons, simply reading one or two reviews is not going to help you either. What you need to do is read between the lines when you read these reviews. Ask yourself "what is this reviewer not telling me about this game?"
For example, before I bought NFL 2K5, I read a bunch of reviews about it. None of them spent more than a couple sentences talking about the franchise mode, which is the main mode I play in every sports game I buy. If they said anything, it was just about it being more "fleshed out" than the year before. Still, they all said the core gameplay was great, so I bought the game. Sure enough, franchise mode was so buggy that it was literally impossible to play more than a couple seasons of it (destroying the whole point of that mode). The developer forums were flush with complaints about numerous game-stopping bugs, several of which I personally encountered pretty quickly, but none of which were mentioned in any review I read.
Obviously, these reviewers simply hadn't played that mode. They looked at the options and assumed they knew how it worked and that was enough for them. I should have known better, because not a single one of these reviews mentioned anything about playing more than a couple games in franchise mode.
It's not just about bugs, though. Reviewers are paid to review what's there, not what's not there. Ask yourself what you're expecting out of a game and whether the reviews you're reading are speaking directly to those wants or not. If you're looking for an adventure game and you find a game you think you might be interested in but the reviewers just talk about how much fun it is to shoot zombies, then even if the game gets a high score, it's probably not for you.
Beyond that, though, there is definitely real corruption in game journalism, whether intentional or not. I think a lot of it is actually not intentional; reviewers get wooed and wowed by big publishers with trips and gifts and whatnot, and all the while the publisher hammers into their heads how big a particular game is going to be, how awesome it is, how everybody's looking forward to it. Eventually it becomes a self-fulfilling thing, and you see more preview coverage and more hype. The press themselves buy into it. The game comes out and in order to justify themselves, all of the press gives it a ridiculously high score. Look at a game like The Legend of Zelda: the Wind Waker, which even Shigeru Miyamoto now calls "boring" and basically unfinished. But it has a score of 94.9% on GameRankings, because the press bought the hype that they themselves helped create.
So my point is you cannot rely on scores (even aggregate ones) and you cannot rely solely on "sound bites" culled from reviews. You need to read reviews carefully and think about why reviewers say certain things and why they are not saying other things. Basically, just use some critical thinking skills - skills that a lot of game reviewers lack.
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2, Insightful)
Look at a game like The Legend of Zelda: the Wind Waker, which even Shigeru Miyamoto now calls "boring" and basically unfinished. But it has a score of 94.9% on GameRankings, because the press bought the hype that they themselves helped create.
Miyamoto said it "wasn't all that it could have been", boring is something completely different. It could have used more dungeo
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
It should be noted that gamerankings.com and sites like gamespot.com have user ratings in addition to the media outlet ones. As in any open forum some user reviews are written by blithering idiots, but others are very insightful and make note of points the r
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:5, Informative)
Miyamoto did not say Wind Waker is boring. He said the triforce hunt section of the game was boring. He did have a list of things he would do differently if he had more time to work on the game, but every game designer has a list like that for every game they have ever worked on.
The triforce hunt does get boring, but it's not that big a section of the game. The only other significant flaw in the game is that you have to get pretty far into the game before the enemies do a significant amount of damage to you, which means that once you get a couple hearts you pretty much can't die unless you're trying to. Despite the claims of the people who only played Ocarina of Time, the graphics fit in with the style of the rest of the series perfectly and are very well done. Quite honestly, if the development team had another 3 months or so to work on the game, it probably would have easily topped Ocarina of Time. In the end, it definitely is one of the better games in the series.
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:1)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2, Insightful)
More often then not places that you can rent games from will not have a lot of the games that you want to try out. For example, Katamari Damacy was not available to be rented until the industry was already screaming rave reviews. Or a different example, Guitar Hero, the game is getting nothing but great reviews but no one carries it for rental.
Gene
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:1)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:1)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
Re:Film and Movie Tie-ins (Score:2)
How to avoid bad games? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, I've found that waiting on both hardware and software purchases saves loads of money. Wait a few months until after the game has been out. Then go ahead and buy it if it turns out to be good/popular.
I see no validity in the implication that just because it's released right before Christmas, you must buy it for Christmas. There are plenty of other games that have been out for a while and proven their value. Don't be a lemming.
Re:How to avoid bad games? (Score:1)
I'd love to agree with you, but my local games stores don't see the point in stocking anything over about two months old, which makes things somewhat difficult on that front at times.
Re:How to avoid bad games? (Score:2)
Or do, because that game was awesome.
director involvement (Score:2)
Easiest way (Score:1)
Download the game first. If you like it and play past an hour or so: buy it. Otherwise trash it.
Re:Easiest way (Score:2)
This is obviously not a problem with people who honestly purchase games
Counter examples (Score:4, Insightful)
Tie Fighter, Chronicles of Riddick
Avoid gangster adventures:
GTA (OK, maybe they meant to exclude that themselves)
The second world war is over:
Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory - maybe not an incredible game but it's great value.
Try an original title:
Many of these suck too...
Download an independent game:
Most people seem to think Darwinia isn't much fun to play. Certainly there are plenty of awful flash games.
terrible games based on cartoons:
Astro Boy (GBA). It's by Treasure!
Re:Counter examples (Score:2)
Same for GTA. Don't avoid GTA -- avoid GTA ripoffs.
And WWII. WW2 games got a kick in popularity from Band of Brothers, and we saw a bunch of ripoffs of that series. Now we're seeing the ripoff of the ripoffs.
Original and indie titles do often suck -- hell, they're often much worse than the McSoftware that EA vends. But you *might* find something good; and if you don't, well, at least you can be smug and
Re:Counter examples (Score:2)
WWII: Call of Duty 2 is quite an awesome looking and playing game. It, and its' original are a blast.
Re:Counter examples (Score:2)
I dunno, their Lord of the Rings games are really good (except for that Third Age RPG), and some of their Bond games aren't bad either (Everything or Nothing was excellent, although not strictly a movie tie-in).
I think you mean: Avoid movie/tv games made by THQ [metacritic.com] or Activision [metacritic.com].
Re:Counter examples (Score:2)
Re:Counter examples (Score:2)
What about... (Score:1)
Yes, there are exceptions. So? (Score:2, Insightful)
Tony Hawk's Extreme Wheelchair, Brothers Of Duty: It'll Be Over By Christmas 2100, GTA: Homicide Village, Every Sport 2011, Big Film 3 or Ricer Racer: Street Edition.
Buy something a bit different, and see what happens. It might suck after all, but at least it w
Re:Yes, there are exceptions. So? (Score:1)
Story icon coincidence? (Score:5, Funny)
Metacritic.com is where I shop first (Score:5, Informative)
Prettymuch if a game has an 85+ rating on here it's not going to be a total lemon.
Just last week I was talking with our facilities manager who was lamenting he hadn't played any games on the Xbox lately, but was wanting to get some more FPS and didn't know which games were any good.
We went to metacritic, used the advanced search, and printed off a list of the top 25 FPS for Xbox, stopped by Gamestop at lunch and he picked up 3 highly rated games.
Re:Metacritic.com is where I shop first (Score:2)
Stay tuned for the exciting conclusion to this post, where we learn whether a guy just wasted $150 on a load of crap games, or that a particular website is decent for this reviewing and recommending sort of thing.
Re:Metacritic.com is where I shop first (Score:2)
Indie Games (Score:5, Informative)
Mutant Storm is a brilliant arcade style game that combines old school frenzy with purty graphics. It is nice to see that folk are still making games like this (now, if I could find a decent platformer -- the last good game in that genre was Castlevania: Symphony of the Night). Not only is Mutant Storm a great game, but it costs less $20.
Darwinia is another wonderful game. Sure, it is a bit short (10 levels, less than 10 hours if you go through it at a reasonable pace), but some of the best games ever were rather short (Sonic the Hedgehog is still one of my favorite games, and can be beaten less than an hour -- two hours if you take your time). Add to this that Darwinia has a very different set of aesthetics from most modern games (rather than realistic graphics, Darwinia seeks to produce a very clean, artificial look, something like the movie Tron), an interesting interface, and a compelling story. Price: $30.
I know that both of these were briefly mentioned in the article, but I thought that they both deserved a bit more praise.
Re:Indie Games (Score:1)
Reading those article remind me it's been a long time since my last uplink game.... Should play it again.
Re:Indie Games (Score:2)
And it's weird you mentioned SotN and forgot all about the latest game in the series, Dawn Of Sorrow.
About Darwinia, they said it'll be availabe for purchase/download at Valve's Steam. I wish them the best of luck, and hope this will open the flood gates for cheap downloadable indie games.
Re:Indie Games (Score:2)
Re:Indie Games (Score:2)
What about Shotgun Gaming? (Score:5, Informative)
Instead of buying one $50 game, buy 5-10 $5-10 games. You know, games that are a year old, on clearance, etc... Sometimes you find a good game that you otherwise would have overlooked.
If 80% of those games aren't worth playing, you still end up with one that is.
Look used.
GT4: $50
GT3 (used): $6
Will you have 700% more fun w/ GT4 over GT3?
That's not to say don't buy the $50 game. After all, many are well worth it. (ie: Shadow of the Colossus)
Re:What about Shotgun Gaming? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What about Shotgun Gaming? (Score:2)
There are still a lot of games not even worth $5-$10, I've found many times I'll put down a game after only playing a few levels. It's odd, because if I had paid more money I probably would have felt more compelled to give the game a chance and would have put more effort into getting past a difficult section or more willing t
how to not buy crap games (Score:4, Interesting)
1. don't buy games
2. go to http://www.gamerankings.com/ [gamerankings.com] and don't buy anything that gets lower than 90%.
this isn't rocket science, come on.
Re:how to not buy crap games (Score:2)
My advice: Buy last years games this year! (Score:4, Insightful)
movie games (Score:3, Insightful)
Knights of the Old Republic
Chronicles of Riddick
Two great movie license games.
Savvy gamers will buy games based on quality of the game, unsavvy gamers won't be reading slashdot anyway so they'll keep buying movie license games.
Re:movie games (Score:2)
It uses the Star Wars name and concepts, races, and other things established in the films.
There is no film on which KotOR is based, and there never will be (that I've hear about at least). The events of the game don't impact the events of the films, and George Lucas himself has said that it (and every ot
To be fair... (Score:2)
Then theres the imfamous E.T. game, the incredibly bad Matrix games and the Batman/Superman/Spiderman comic book games which almost alwa
I'm doing my part... (Score:2)
This holiday season I'm investing in a GP2X [homelinux.net]. This device has been reported on previously [slashdot.org] on Slashdot; basically, it's a handheld that's powered by open source software. If this doesn't help the "game industry," I don't know what will... :-)
Terrible way to choose a game (Score:5, Interesting)
Thank goodness for articles like these... (Score:2)
How Not To Read Crap Articles This Season (Score:2)
It's a shame the author of the article isn't aware of The Guardian Gamesblog [guardian.co.uk] that had an entry several weeks ago titled Peter Jackson - game developer [guardian.co.uk]. It seems the director was unhappy with EA's treatment of the LotR games, so for the game based on King Kong he contacted the developer of Beyond Good and Evil, a great but overlooked title, and even shipped members of the design team to New Zealand, gave them information about the movie and discussed the game with them.
Yes, game
Re:How Not To Read Crap Articles This Season (Score:2)
zerg (Score:2)
Look for the bad (Score:2)
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:2, Insightful)
Here in the UK, it's Crap Games, not Crappy Games. Two countries, seperated once again by a common language.
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, this is from the Guardian (UK), and while it's not exactly the Queen's English, "crap" as an adjective seems to be a reasonably common Britishism. "Shit" works the same way on the other side of the pond - you'd know exactly what I meant if I told you that I have a shit car. ;)
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:2)
"Your car is shit." vs "Your car is the shit." or
"You are shit." vs "You are a shit." vs "You are the shit."
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:2)
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:2)
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:2)
That's why those of us with precise intellects prefer the word "shiznit" to minimize such ambiguizzlety.
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:1)
Still sounds more awkward than lift and lorry. And I love wanker.
Re:Here goes the learnding (Score:2)
There's a lot of those these days - which one did you mean?
Sorry, couldn't resist ;)
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:2)
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:1)
A Bit Sexist Are We? (Score:4, Insightful)
I like the way that you use selective political-correctness to try and accuse them of being racist, yet you completely disregard the fact that they also said man.
I suppose if the same game featured a woman, the game would be ok to pick up and enjoy?
The specific inclusion of a specific gender into their "bad games" definition is a bit much, IMO.
(Please note the use of sarcasm here, just to point out the article was no more racist than it was sexist)
Re:A Bit Sexist Are We? (Score:2)
Hot damn! Why aren't there any games with a shotgun wielding african american protagonist?
Like Charleton Heston's partner in Omega Man, she was one cool cat and kicked ass.
Re:A Bit Sexist Are We? (Score:2)
I like the way that you use selective political-correctness to try and accuse them of being racist, yet you completely disregard the fact that they also said man.
I suppose if the same game featured a woman, the game would be ok to pi
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:1)
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:1, Redundant)
--trb
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:2)
That's what 95% of use of the word 'racism' is, But don't tell anyone... it's a secret.
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:2)
I wouldn't take that quote as a sign that the article's writer is racist. Rather, I'd take it as a sign that the author made a nod to the fact that there's racism in the video game industry.
What? (Score:2)
black man + gun != racist
Now, if the game was something like "Underground Railroad Tycoon", then yeah, I'd have to agree with you. But I don't even sense the most subtle hint of racism in games. At all.
Care to point some examples out to me?
Re:What? (Score:2)
Re:What? (Score:2)
You mean like "human", "dwarf", "elf", etc? Yeah, that's really racist all right. God forbid each of those races have different physiologies that enhance certain traits. Everyone should be human, I guess.
Can you name one game (outside an obvious white supremacist propaganda game) that bases stats on skin color?
Gender is an entirely different issue altogether. That's not what this was originally about. Some games choose not to place stat restrictions/l
Re:What? (Score:1)
And can someone tell me why is it cheaper to buy a female soilder than a male soldier in FFT. I'm still woundering why.
Re:What? (Score:2)
It's been a long time since I played FFT, but if I remember correctly, female chars had better DEX (or was it called Agility?) scores and worse defense and total HP, so they died more often?
Re:What? (Score:2)
Re:What? (Score:2)
And no, one black guy with a gun is not racist. But if you start looking at cheap knock-off games that are trying to capitalize on the success of GTA and/or "street culture," you'll probably notice that a disproportionate number of the gang-bangers in those games are black.
Re:What? (Score:1)
Oh my god! You're right! I just took a look at all the NBA games that I've bought over the years - the majority of the people in them are black! IT MUST BE RACISM! THEY'RE TRYING TO TELL ME THAT ALL BLACK PEOPLE PLAY BASKETBALL IN THE NBA!
People who cry racism at the first sign of
Re:What? (Score:2)
You're right. I mistook your statement. My apologies.
"But if you start looking at cheap knock-off games that are trying to capitalize on the success of GTA and/or 'street culture,' you'll probably notice that a disproportionate number of the gang-bangers in those games are black."
Maybe that's because San Andreas feature
Re:What? (Score:2)
True. But I wasn't trying to insinuate that games that feature black guys with guns are all racist. I was pointing out a good reason not to assume that the author of an article that mentions video game
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:1)
The character with the gun has to have some race. Is it racist to show a white guy with a gun? What about an Asian guy with a gun? Why do you think the example of a game with a black male wielding a gun proves that the game industry is racist?
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:2)
When he means "black man with shotgun" he doesn't mean Malcolm from UT. He means "gang banging thug".
Now, personally, I'd extend that rule to apply to any game where the box art shows a protagonist wearing street-gang glothing with a shaved head wielding firearms, not just black ones... but by and large, right not the trend for street gangery is to have
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:1)
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:1)
Re:A Bit Racist Are We? (Score:2)
Bad advice. Ignoring the obvious biases against black men with guns, there are several good games out there that feature a cover with a black man with a gun.
For example, Suffering: The Ties that Bind is a great fps horror game, where you play a convicted murderer who is escaping from a tormented version of hell on earth, set in Baltimore. (One might add that Baltimore looks just like normal!
Re:Avoid anything from EA (Score:1)
My objection to the patch is that my whole reason for liking BF2 so much is the feeling of open spaces and a rural atmosphere. Special Forces seems to be an attempt to turn it back into precisely the close-combat corridor blastfest of Counterstrike and co. that I was so sick of before it came along.
Re:Avoid anything from EA (Score:1)
> open spaces and a rural atmosphere. Special Forces seems to be an attempt to turn it back into
> precisely the close-combat corridor blastfest of Counterstrike and co. that I was so sick of
> before it came along.
Each to their own. I only like the city maps (Karkand, Mashtuur, Sharqi) really, although I tolerate Dragon Valley and Fushe sometimes. I don't do planes/helis, so unless you are lucky enough t
Re:Avoid anything from EA (Score:1)
Re:Avoid anything from EA (Score:2)
Re:suggestions (Score:2)
Re:suggestions (Score:2)
Let's consider a few other 'exceptions', shall we? Civ VI, HL2, Halo 2, GTA3, FFX, GT4, MGS3, Elder Scrolls 3... I'd be willing to bet all of those are above 90% on gamerankings. But I guess you'd rather play crap, so long as it's not a sequel.