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Descent Into Avernus & Mad Max: Why the adventure ultimately failed (to me!)
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<blockquote data-quote="Ruin Explorer" data-source="post: 8656387" data-attributes="member: 18"><p>I've also played all these games, and I feel like your argument is rather disingenuous, or at least very lazy and handwave-y, because you're ignoring change simply because there still are some fetch quests, and you're ignoring the positioning of the fetch quests, which is increasingly <em>outside the narrative</em>. Which is exactly what [USER=6807784]@Shardstone[/USER] said and you totally ignored that bit.</p><p></p><p>It's definitely true that all these games pad themselves out to varying degrees with fetch quests.</p><p></p><p>But that's what it is, padding. Witcher 3, for example, if you follow the main path, which still takes you like 60 hours, you will do very few quests that a person could honestly and straightforwardly call a "fetch quest", with a straight face. I mean, obviously we're on the internet, and a lot of people make intentionally reductive and disingenuous arguments to win internet points (I'm not saying you are, but veering very very close with that extremely broad list). Indeed, you have to work fairly hard to find honest-to-god "fetch quests" in Witcher 3.</p><p></p><p>But back on my point, with the possible exception of Solasta, which is just badly-designed period, all of the above increasingly position actual "fetch quests", i.e. the truly lame ones that are equivalent to those in DiA, that don't really make sense except as a means to bribe artificially uncooperative NPCs, outside the main narrative, . I mean, we can look at some examples.</p><p></p><p>Baldur's Gate 3 - You can easily play 10+ hours in and not have seen a "fetch quest", and indeed the first time I thought I did, it turned out things were rather more complicated than that.</p><p></p><p>Witcher 3 - You can play virtually the entire game without touching a "fetch quest" of a real kind. Hell you could do most of the side-content without it. It was an actual design goal to shy away from them, and casually slapping TW3 in this list weakens your entire argument.</p><p></p><p>ME:LE - (I presume you me LE, not CE, otherwise I have no idea what game you're referring to). First off, these are games from 2007-2012, so that's disingenuous right there. But even then, they don't really have "fetch quests" as a major part of the game. I'm not sure ME2, for example, even has a "fetch quest" in it outside of the most tertiary content. I guess if you stretched it you could try to argue the Reaper IFF, but it doesn't really work because it doesn't fit the fetch-quest structure or reasoning - you're not doing a random-ass task for someone else, you're doing something vital to your survival.</p><p></p><p>2077 - I mean, if you're going to describe getting the cyberspider for the heist as a "fetch quest", well, you're stretching the definition waaaay past breaking point, frankly, and I can't think of anything else in the main story (admittedly I'm only 90% through, no spoilers please) which is a fetch quest, because you need to go the whole A-B-A thing, and generally they avoid that. Usually it's more like A-B-Something goes horribly wrong-C-D etc.</p><p></p><p>Pathfinder: WotR - Significantly worse-designed quest-wise than the rest of these games, much lazier approach but also just incredibly, insanely, unnecessarily content-heavy, which includes some genuinely annoying and classical fetch-quests as part of that mountain of padding. Still fairly minimal fetch quests in the actual main story though. Plenty outside of that.</p><p></p><p>Solasta - The worst-designed game you've listed here, and intentionally old-skool. Definitely has fetch quests in the main story, but it's an outright bad game, and doesn't disprove the trend.</p><p></p><p>DA:I - Has a nuclear ton of fetch-quests, and much worse, "gather quests" (like "collect X letters home from dead soldiers on this battlefield"). Almost all of them are part the gigantic amount of almost MMO-ish unnecessary quest-cruft it has overlaying the main story. Whereas the main story and indeed most of the companion stories eschew that approach.</p><p></p><p>TLDR: [USER=6807784]@Shardstone[/USER] is right - fetch quests have been seen as bad/lazy writing since before 2010 (as you accidentally show by including ME:LE), and have been increasingly pushed into "padding" rather than included as part of the main narrative.</p><p></p><p>Pen and paper adventures generally shouldn't need any "padding" at all.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ruin Explorer, post: 8656387, member: 18"] I've also played all these games, and I feel like your argument is rather disingenuous, or at least very lazy and handwave-y, because you're ignoring change simply because there still are some fetch quests, and you're ignoring the positioning of the fetch quests, which is increasingly [I]outside the narrative[/I]. Which is exactly what [USER=6807784]@Shardstone[/USER] said and you totally ignored that bit. It's definitely true that all these games pad themselves out to varying degrees with fetch quests. But that's what it is, padding. Witcher 3, for example, if you follow the main path, which still takes you like 60 hours, you will do very few quests that a person could honestly and straightforwardly call a "fetch quest", with a straight face. I mean, obviously we're on the internet, and a lot of people make intentionally reductive and disingenuous arguments to win internet points (I'm not saying you are, but veering very very close with that extremely broad list). Indeed, you have to work fairly hard to find honest-to-god "fetch quests" in Witcher 3. But back on my point, with the possible exception of Solasta, which is just badly-designed period, all of the above increasingly position actual "fetch quests", i.e. the truly lame ones that are equivalent to those in DiA, that don't really make sense except as a means to bribe artificially uncooperative NPCs, outside the main narrative, . I mean, we can look at some examples. Baldur's Gate 3 - You can easily play 10+ hours in and not have seen a "fetch quest", and indeed the first time I thought I did, it turned out things were rather more complicated than that. Witcher 3 - You can play virtually the entire game without touching a "fetch quest" of a real kind. Hell you could do most of the side-content without it. It was an actual design goal to shy away from them, and casually slapping TW3 in this list weakens your entire argument. ME:LE - (I presume you me LE, not CE, otherwise I have no idea what game you're referring to). First off, these are games from 2007-2012, so that's disingenuous right there. But even then, they don't really have "fetch quests" as a major part of the game. I'm not sure ME2, for example, even has a "fetch quest" in it outside of the most tertiary content. I guess if you stretched it you could try to argue the Reaper IFF, but it doesn't really work because it doesn't fit the fetch-quest structure or reasoning - you're not doing a random-ass task for someone else, you're doing something vital to your survival. 2077 - I mean, if you're going to describe getting the cyberspider for the heist as a "fetch quest", well, you're stretching the definition waaaay past breaking point, frankly, and I can't think of anything else in the main story (admittedly I'm only 90% through, no spoilers please) which is a fetch quest, because you need to go the whole A-B-A thing, and generally they avoid that. Usually it's more like A-B-Something goes horribly wrong-C-D etc. Pathfinder: WotR - Significantly worse-designed quest-wise than the rest of these games, much lazier approach but also just incredibly, insanely, unnecessarily content-heavy, which includes some genuinely annoying and classical fetch-quests as part of that mountain of padding. Still fairly minimal fetch quests in the actual main story though. Plenty outside of that. Solasta - The worst-designed game you've listed here, and intentionally old-skool. Definitely has fetch quests in the main story, but it's an outright bad game, and doesn't disprove the trend. DA:I - Has a nuclear ton of fetch-quests, and much worse, "gather quests" (like "collect X letters home from dead soldiers on this battlefield"). Almost all of them are part the gigantic amount of almost MMO-ish unnecessary quest-cruft it has overlaying the main story. Whereas the main story and indeed most of the companion stories eschew that approach. TLDR: [USER=6807784]@Shardstone[/USER] is right - fetch quests have been seen as bad/lazy writing since before 2010 (as you accidentally show by including ME:LE), and have been increasingly pushed into "padding" rather than included as part of the main narrative. Pen and paper adventures generally shouldn't need any "padding" at all. [/QUOTE]
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