• UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      Time-wasting respawns/progress loss seems like a very blunt tool with which to motivate the player to keep playing.

      Tried playing a game of tennis with my friends. 0, 15, 30, 40, Point. Then if you’re two scores ahead the game resets. Wtf! Why did the game reset? I was 30-40 and now I’m back to 0? I should be allowed to keep my 30 into the next game.

      Now I’m being induced into playing more tennis! I hate this.

      And tennis has so few maps! Almost everywhere I go is concrete. Very luck to find a clay court anywhere. You need to buy the DLC to find grass, and only if you’re really lucky.

      Its repetitive. Its exhausting. The rules barely make sense. And the match-making is completely fucked. I’m either playing people I trounce or getting my ass handed to me almost every time I go to a court.

      I think I’m going to try and pick up chess instead. Does anyone know how I can upgrade my pawns to queens, though?

    • tetris11@lemmy.ml
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      4 hours ago

      It’s not quite the same though, souls still keeps the items you dropped, its just up to you to retrieve them.

      You can’t claim you climbed a mountain, if each time you fell you just resumed from where you lost grip. Falling and reclimbing with renewed tenacity means that when you finally conquer the mountain, the view is all the more sweeter for the huge experience you’ve gained along the way.

      • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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        1 hour ago

        You can’t claim you climbed a mountain, if each time you fell you just resumed from where you lost grip.

        Well, good thing games are better than real life. Or they would be worthless.

      • gedhrel@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        You can’t claim you climbed a mountain, if each time you fell you just resumed from where you lost grip.

        Sure you can; it’s called redpointing.

          • gedhrel@lemmy.world
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            39 minutes ago

            Thanks. My preference is intersectional second ed. I don’t mind conflict as long as it’s not derived from lazy racist tropes.

    • LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      I think soulslikes are appealing to a certain type of player. Personally I love Dark Souls it’s my favorite game.

      But I like playing with stakes. I remember stumbling around in the forest, down to my last scrap of health, with no more heals, desperately trying to reach the next bonfire. That for me is fun. Is it frustrating to lose your progress? Sure. But the only “penalty” is you have to try again or change your approach and try something else. And really, is being forced to replay a section inherently punishing? If the game itself is fun, you should still be having fun fighting and exploring even if you aren’t progressing.

    • filcuk@lemmy.zip
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      5 hours ago

      It can be the only way to punish people in certain games.
      If there’s no punishment for failure, there’s no reason to respect any dangers the game presents.
      In Minecraft, what should happen if you walk north for an hour and die? If you respawn with your inventory, why not just do that again and die as a quick way to get back? Why even bother with equipment or food at that point? Suddenly, half the game mechanics have lost their meaning, and there’s a lot less to do for the player.

      • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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        1 hour ago

        If the punishment for failure is wasting time, then I’m just going to play something else.

        Games are supposed to be enjoyable.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    Do we at least get a participation medal, or can we buy one?

    What other costly mistakes can we buy ourselves out of?

  • Victoria@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    12 hours ago

    streamlining

    you mean instead of playing the game, i could pay you to not play the game i’m playing instead?

    sign me up

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I have this same mindset and it’s great because it results in 0 temptation to spend money on game progression or items. If I’m playing a game where it feels like spending money like that is the only way to have fun with it, I just drop the game.

      Actually, I don’t even really bother with any games that I understand to have p2w aspects or any mtx that aren’t just cosmetic.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        If I’m playing a game where it feels like spending money like that is the only way to have fun with it, I just drop the game.

        A big part of the “hook” in GACHA and other whale-hunting games is the initial hook of a fun and engaging setup. Genshin Impact and Sword of Convallaria both stick out to me as initially very fun and captivating games. They draw you in with the cut scenes and ramp up the curve like a normal open world JRPG.

        But the longer you play, the more you start tripping over resource requirements and timers on abilities and the need to do “daily” activities that involve logging on every day. All of this is fun in the early cycles but feels more and more like work by the later stages of the game. Dungeons start looking more and more basic - big empty rooms with a bunch of respawns in the center. Fights feel more contingent on having a bigger number than any kind of strategy or skill.

        If you’ve played older traditional JRPGs before, it’ll start feeling weird because you know you should be expecting the game to pick up towards a dramatic conclusion after 100 hours of play. But these games just… go on forever. There’s no payoff. You get tired and bored and you leave.

        But if you haven’t played older traditional JRPGs, you’re just falling into this skinner box of induced anxiety. The game becomes habit-forming. The induced reflex to trigger a feature or use a power that’s increasingly paywalled encourages you to open your (parent’s) wallet.

        Actually, I don’t even really bother with any games that I understand to have p2w aspects or any mtx that aren’t just cosmetic.

        There’s a networking effect to a lot of these games. Up front, you’re strongly encouraged to get your friends to join in. And friends playing a game together can have enormous staying power. I know people who have been running the same D&D game for 20 years (literally the same characters and world, going on into the level 200+ range as they just crank those numbers higher). I know a couple that’s been doing WoW for their entire relationship - they started playing when they started dating and now they’ve got their ten-year-old son along for the ride.

        I think part of what gives these games staying power is that they don’t require you to empty your savings account to participate. But I think its naive to discount the addictive power of a community space you’re comfortable socializing in.

        These places are predatory. I can’t discount them just because I’m not one of the ones that got eaten.

        • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          Agreed, I’m hoping to impart my mindset on my daughter so she recognizes the trap before spending money on it. The games use an exponential growth curve, which means you can spend some money to be dominant for a little while, but the enemies will always catch up because that’s what it’s designed to do. So any power purchase is temporary and will set you up to feel like you need to spend even more to “keep” the “investment” you’ve already made.

          Which also makes quitting harder because quitting entirely is admitting whatever money was spent on in game shit was wasted. It’s just sunk cost fallacy and there really should be regulation on shit like that.

          And, to add insult to injury, the people running the game can decide at any point that it’s not worth running anymore and just shut it all down, leaving players that wasted tons of money with nothing.

          I prefer subscriptions over that and still to this day don’t mind that I spent a lot of money on my wow subscription because I knew what I was paying for.

  • BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca
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    10 hours ago

    Recently I re-played Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3 on an emulator and did not feel ashamed by making save points everywhere to avoid re-playing the levels, I had time for that as a kid.

    • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 hours ago

      I get the urge, but I wouldn’t reccomend doing that on any of the later Wario Land games. They’re puzzle platformers, so (especially in 2 and 3) the punishment for messing up is the short window of time it takes to get back to the start of the puzzle.

      • BeigeAgenda@lemmy.ca
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        4 hours ago

        I used save states on them also, I can’t remember if there were any problems with the puzzles.

    • Lurker@sh.itjust.works
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      9 hours ago

      I use save function though but differently instead of saving everytime I breath I just save once at start of Level then everytime even if I take a single hit or Fall somewhere. I load my last start save no matter progress. That’s why it take me around 1 week just beat one game.

  • TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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    14 hours ago

    Nintendo is way ahead of these guys. The last few mario games let you pick a character that can’t be hurt or killed. And if that’s too hard for you, they’ll even show you exactly how to play the level.

    • WolfLink@sh.itjust.works
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      11 hours ago

      Mario Wonder both had a “baby mode” mechanic and yet also had some genuinely interesting and challenging levels.

      Celeste is extremely difficult yet also has a baby mode feature.

      Many games have a “tell me a story” difficulty level which is more or less the same idea.

      Games having an easy difficulty without detracting from the game’s main challenge and balance is not a problem IMO.

      • Jesus_666@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        The real problem with the “improved” SMB from the post is not that it has ways of making the game easier, it’s that the “fixes” amount to a microtransaction hellhole, complete with intrusive prompts.

        I’m all for games with configurable difficulty. Nobody thinks less of Doom for having difficulty settings. But everybody does think less of games that pair frustrating mechanics (like difficulty spikes or countdown timers) with bypass MTX.

        To use the default controversial genre, I think that a soulslike with difficulty settings would work just fine. But a soulslike where your healing flask only restores one charge every ten minutes unless you buy more charges from the store (but store-bought ones can exceed the normal maximum) or where game-breakingly OP equipment is available as MTX would not go over well.

    • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      I can at least support baby mode for, like, extremely small kids and maybe co-op with that one person who’s never touched a video game in their life but wants to play along with the other three. You know, the kids are over at grandpa’s, and he wants to feel like he’s playing and having fun with them instead of just setting and forgetting them on the magic dopamine box, but he’s no good at it, so he takes the invincible character. I think that’s reasonable, inclusive game design.

      What I take issue with is when baby mode drags down the difficulty of the rest of the game modes. For example, you as a game designer benchmark “normal mode” against “being literally invulnerable”, and so you now have to play hard mode to even vaguely feel any sort of tension.

      • Jiggle_Physics@sh.itjust.works
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        2 hours ago

        That is just bad game design, and nothing inherently to do with having easier modes. There is a long, long, history of games having easy modes, and still being some of the most challenging games made, when you select the harder ones.

      • TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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        14 hours ago

        I agree completely. Idk why they do it. They got filthy rich off kids 5-10 playing the shit out of NES games.

        • PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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          13 hours ago

          The way it works is this: The people catch hold of something, and make magic. It makes a ton of money, because people can recognize magic. Then other people with investment money get involved. Gradually, the magic oriented people are outnumbered, the fun of their average working day declines, and they leave or simply get shouldered into some niche somewhere by the unimaginable torrent of motivated people who have something else on their mind.

          No one involved in Mario, Zelda, Metroid, or Contra has been anywhere near the design team at Nintendo for decades. These guys own the rights to call it “Mario,” but if they weren’t making games where you can turn Mario into an elephant, they could be just as happy making sweat pants with writing on the ass. And the magic is off somewhere else, doing its thing.

          • imaqtpie@sh.itjust.works
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            12 hours ago

            These guys own the rights to call it “Mario,” but if they weren’t making games where you can turn Mario into an elephant, they could be just as [miserable] making sweat pants with writing on the ass.

            FTFY. But also nice one, I loled. And you’re absolutely spot on with what you’re saying too.

            • Farid@startrek.website
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              9 hours ago

              I’m not sure if I’m missing sarcasm here, but Super Mario Bros. Wonder is freaking amazing. There’s so much creativity packed into that game, that almost every level they introduce a new mechanic that could easily be it’s whole entire game.

              • imaqtpie@sh.itjust.works
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                6 hours ago

                Oh, I dunno about any of the newer Mario games, I was just taking people’s word for it.

                I was agreeing with the way that successful brands/IP tend to get milked to death by business types long after the creative types have moved on. But tbf I think Nintendo is one of the few corporations where they have been able to maintain the creative vitality of their franchises for 30+ years, they may be an exception to that rule. Especially with Mario and Zelda, they continued to make great games long after the original creative teams were gone.

                But still, all it takes is a few dumbass MBAs to ruin great things by driving away the people who make the magic happen.

                • Farid@startrek.website
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                  4 hours ago

                  Yeah, I agree in general, IP milking is pretty bad right now (always been bad, but gotten even worse), but Nintendo is an exception. If they release a game at all, it at least has some merit to justify its existence. Except of course, Pokemon…