The Little Raven
First Post
Nightchilde-2 said:D'OH!
Obviously, it's been years...
That's cool, it's been a long time since I've needed 30 extra lives, myself. However, I just happened to be wearing my Konami Code t-shirt to work today.
Nightchilde-2 said:D'OH!
Obviously, it's been years...
hazel monday said:There's really nothing to argue about. You can think my opinion's wrong. that's fine. But you can't objectively prove my opinion's wrong any more than I can prove that yours is wrong. It's a waste of time to try.
Stoat said:Sure. Which is why just saying "4E feels like a video game." Doesn't do anything to further the discussion. It's equivalent to saying, "I don't like it, just because."
Stoat said:If the answer is "It's a subjective opinion," that's fine, but surely there must be some basis for that opinion?
Mourn said:According to a post by Lizard over on RPG.NET, it's not the claimant's job to explain his opinion, it's the opposition's job.
Please, tell me what wasn't focused on combat with the 2e PHB.Tsyr said:Actually, Baldur's Gate isn't particularly videogamey. It tried to stick as close to pen and paper rules as it could.
The things I think people (including sometimes myself) mean about it being more videogamey:
1) Everything is about combat now.
You know what I think? Doing the same thing over and over and over, having perhaps 2-3 options, is "video-gamey" because in console games, you're only punching one or two buttons constantly.2) I think the powers system draws a lot of these complaints. "More Abilities = More Fun"
As others have said, it's not "Aggro". It may be arbitrary mechanics to encourage monsters to do certain things, but video games do not have a monopoly on arbitrary gamist rules.3) Agro control abilities. Meh.
hazel monday said:I'm not trying to use some secret code when i say that.
I'm not trying to obscure the issue. It's not some "sloppy shorthand".
I mean exactly what I say: 4.0 feels and plays like a videogame. It's not a value judgement. It's just my opinion about the game. If you like videogames then it's a good thing. If, like me, you don't, then it's not a good thing.
Hussar said:This has been a drum I've been banging on for a while. Heck, I did that whole Anime Challenge thing in my sig precisely for this sort of thing.
All of these so-called criticisms - animey, video-gamey, board-gamey, card-gamey whatever - are sloppy short hands that only serve to obscure any point you are trying to make. The terms, in and of themselves, are so vague that they can mean anything you like.
I remember some time ago being able to apply the term Pokemount to Shadowfax and then watch the head explosions of the Tolkien fans.
If you have a valid criticsm of a game, make it. There are lots of things you can criticise in any edition. 4e is certainly not immune to that. But, relying on vague, overwrought terminology that clouds the issue doesn't actually serve any purpose other than hot buttoning a topic and turning it into yet another edition war.
Instead of saying, "X edition is video-gamey" (after all, this is hardly a new criticism), refer specifically to those elements you don't like. If you find the concept of aggro distasteful, talk about that. If you think there is too strong of a focus on combat, say, "I think X edition is too strongly focused on combat" rather than trying to score points on the Internet.
This, with a bag of chips.To a video game fan such as myself, claiming that D&D plays like a video-game is so imprecise as to not really hold a lot of meaning. To you, it may be very obvious what you mean...but without knowing what YOU think 'plays like a video game' means, the phrase lacks any sort of clarity to a general discussion.