• The Picard ManeuverOP
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      954 months ago

      So many retro games are replayable and fun to this day, but I struggle to return to games whose art style relied on being “cutting edge realistic” 20 years ago.

      • @sploosh@lemmy.world
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        534 months ago

        I dunno, Crysis looks pretty great on modern hardware and its 18 years old.

        Also, CRYSIS IS 18 WHERE DID THE TIME GO?

        • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          154 months ago

          There’s a joke in there somewhere about Crysis being the age of consent but I just can’t land it right now.

          Probably because I’m old enough to remember it’s release.

      • @conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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        34 months ago

        STALKER is good, though I played a lot of Anomaly mostly, and I’m not sure that STALKER was ever known for bleeding edge graphics

        • @UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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          24 months ago

          Stalker gamma is free if anyone wanted to try it out. I ended up buying the OG games cause I liked it so much.

          The 2nd one is good, but I would advise people to wait until they implement more promised features before they buy it.

          • @conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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            14 months ago

            I just finished STALKER 2. It’s a fucking mess and was unplayably broken for half a month at one point for me, and I fucking love it. It took me 80 hours of mostly focusing on advancing the story to reach the end, and I feel like I only saw maybe 30% of what’s out there. I can already tell that this is going to be my new Skyrim, tooling around with 500 hours in the game and still finding new situations. I’m SO FUCKING PUMPED for anomaly 2-- a lot of the same modders that worked on anomaly are already putting out modpacks for Stalker 2.

    • snooggums
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      94 months ago

      Like cgi and other visual effects, realism has some applications that can massively improve the experience in some games. Just like how lighting has a massive impact, or sound design, etc.

      Chasing it at the expense of game play or art design is a negative though.

    • @conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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      64 months ago

      Idk, I’d say that pursuing realism is worthy, but you get diminishing returns pretty quick when all the advances are strictly in one (or I guess two, with audio) sense. Graphical improvements massively improved the experience of the game moving from NES or Gameboy to SNES and again to PS1 and N64. I’d say that the most impressive leap, imo, was PS1/N64 to PS2/XBox/GameCube. After that, I’d say we got 3/4 of the return from improvements to the PS3 generation, 1/2 the improvement to PS4 gen, 1/5 the improvement to PS5, and 1/8 the improvement when we move on to PS5 Pro. I’d guess if you plotted out the value add, with the perceived value on the Y and the time series or compute ability or texture density or whatever on the x, it’d probably look a bit like a square root curve.

      I do think that there’s an (understandably, don’t get me wrong) untapped frontier in gaming realism in that games don’t really engage your sense of touch or any of the subsets thereof. The first step in this direction is probably vibrating controllers, and I find that it definitely does make the game feel more immersive. Likewise, few games engage your proprioception (that is, your knowledge of your body position in space), though there’ve been attempts to engage it via the Switch, Wii, and VR. There’s, of course, enormous technical barriers, but I think there’s very clearly a good reason why a brain interface is sort of thought of as the holy grail of gaming.

      • @jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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        54 months ago

        Having a direct brain interface game, that’s realistic enough to overcome the Uncanny Valley, would destroy peoples lives. People would, inevitably, prefer their virtual environment to the real one. They’d end up wasting away, plugged into some machine. It would lend serious credence to the idea of a simulated universe, and reduce the human experience by replacing it with an improved one. Shit, give me a universe wherein I can double-jump, fly, or communicate with animals, and I’d have a hard time returning to this version.

        We could probably get close with a haptic feedback suit, a mechanism that allows you to run/jump in any direction, and a VR headset, but there would always be something tethering you to reality. But a direct brain to machine interaction would have none of that, it would essentially be hijacking our own electrical neural network to run simulations. Much like Humans trying to play Doom on literally everything. It would be as amazing as it was destructive, finally realizing the warnings from so many parents before its time: “that thing’ll fry your brain.”

        • @conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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          44 months ago

          Tbf, it’s kinda bullshit that we can’t double jump IRL. Double jumping just feels right, like it’s something we should be able to do.

          Yeah, no, it’d likely be really awful for us. I mean, can you imagine what porn would be like on that? That’s a fermi paradox solution right there. I could see the tech having a lot of really great applications, too, like training simulations for example, but the video game use case is simultaneously exhilarating and terrifying.

        • @UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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          14 months ago

          People would, inevitably, prefer their virtual environment to the real one. They’d end up wasting away, plugged into some machine. It would lend serious credence to the idea of a simulated universe, and reduce the human experience by replacing it with an improved one.

          Have you considered making the real world better?

      • @UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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        14 months ago

        I’ve been playing the zelda games in order since the new one was announced on the switch and I’m stuck on OoT (zelda 2 was a pain as well).

        I don’t have much free time.

    • @ProfessorProteus@lemmy.world
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      34 months ago

      I agree generally, but I have to offer a counterpoint with Kingdom Come: Deliverance. I only just got back into it after bouncing off in 2019, and I wish I hadn’t stopped playing. I have a decent-ish PC and it still blows my entire mind when I go roaming around the countryside.

      Like Picard said above, in due time this too will look aged, but even 7 years on, it looks and plays incredible even at less-than-highest settings. IMHO the most visually impressive game ever created (disclaimer: I haven’t seen or played Horizon). Can’t wait to play KC:D 2!

    • @Dil@is.hardlywork.ing
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      4 months ago

      We should be looking at more particles, more dynamic lighting, effects, realism is forsure a goal just not in the way you think, pixar movies have realistic lighting and shadows but arent “realistic”

      After I started messing with cycles on blender I went back to wanting more “realistic” graphics, its better for stylized games too

      But yeah I want the focus to shift towards procedural generation (I like how houdini and unreal approach it right now), more physics based interactions, elemental interactions, realtime fire, smoke, fluid, etc. Destruction is the biggest dissapointment, was really hoping for a fps that let me spend hours bulldozing and blowing up the map.

      • @CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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        34 months ago

        Couldn’t disagree more. Immersion comes from the details, not the fidelity. I was told to expect this incredibly immersive experience form RDR2 and then I got:

        • carving up animals is frequently wonky
        • gun cleaning is just autopilot wiping the exterior of a gun
        • shaving might as well be done off-screen
        • you transport things on your horse without tying them down

        Yeah that didn’t do it for me.

      • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I had way more fun in GTA 3 than GTA 5. RDR2 isn’t a success because the horse has realistic balls.

        To put another nail in the coffin, ARMA’s latest incarnation isn’t the most realistic shooter ever made. No amount of wavy grass and moon phases can beat realistic weapon handling in the fps sim space. (And no ARMA’s weapon handling is not realistic, it’s what a bunch of keyboard warriors decided was realistic because it made them feel superior.) Hilariously the most realistic shooter was a recruiting game made by the US Army with half the graphics.

              • @Maggoty@lemmy.world
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                14 months ago

                I see, and yeah graphics can help a lot. But how much do we actually need? At what point is the gain not enough to justify forcing everyone to buy another generation of GPUs?

    • Cid Vicious
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      14 months ago

      It’s the right choice for some games and not for others. Just like cinematography, there’s different styles and creators need to pick which works best for what they’re trying to convey. Would HZD look better styled like Hi-Fi Rush? I don’t really think so. GOW? That one I could definitely see working more stylized.