- Photo:
- user uploaded image
Things Modern Games Need To Stop Doing
Bioware's been locking away their games' endings since Mass Effect 3 in 2012, but more recently Dragon Age: Inquisition put its satisfying conclusion in a bit of paid DLC. Players who didn't purchase the "Trespasser" expansion probably felt pretty confused when one of the main game's party members turns out to be a villain, since the turn is only vaguely hinted at in the primary campaign.
Older games like Fable: The Lost Chapters added more satisfying content to the base products, but they didn't do it at a cost of a satisfying finale for people who didn't invest in every piece of available DLC. Optional missions with new stories are great, but when the overall narrative is dependent on content that's not available day one, many players will undoubtedly feel cheated.
Purchase
- 2
Always Online DRM Ruins Playability Of Games Like 'Diablo 3'
- Photo:
- Diablo III
- Blizzard Entertainment
Few launches have gone as poorly as Diablo III's. The game required a constant connection to Blizzard's servers as part of its DRM, but those servers were unprepared for the amount of people who bought the game.
Many players were locked out of the game for days while waiting for the single player game's log-in queues. Of course, DRM will always bring controversy with gamers, but at least games like the original Diablo simply relied on physical CDs or licensing keys to verify legal players without locking out people with bad internet connections.
Purchase
- Photo:
- Photo:
- Overwatch
- Blizzard Entertainment
DLC is great, as are optional skins. If you love a game, you'll definitely appreciate more content coming out after the main release. Having to gamble time and money to acquire them? Not so great.
Overwatch has many things going for it, so its heavy use of loot boxes is a noticeable blemish. Players can either unlock loot boxes by playing the game (which is free but takes forever) or pay a little money to get them more quickly. However, even if you spend real-life money on loot boxes, there's no way to tell what's inside, so you could end up with a bunch of unlockables you don't care about.
What consumer actually wants to be unable to choose the DLC they're purchasing? In games like The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion at least you knew you were buying your horse useless cosmetic armor with real money.
Purchase
- Photo:
Pre-order bonuses incentivize fans to pay for upcoming games before they're released, and are often tied to a specific retailer. For example, DmC: Devil May Cry added bonus skins for the main character's weapons.
If you were a big enough fan of the franchise to care about cosmetic changes like these, you were probably be frustrated by your inability to collect them all without purchasing multiple copies of the game, since Best Buy, Gamestop, and Amazon all offered different bonus packs. At the same time, this type of marketing forces players to gamble on the game's quality months before reviews come out. DmC ended up getting an 85 on Metacritic, but its user score is only a 6.9 out of 10, suggesting many fans of the series were disappointed when the game actually came out.
Many people probably pre-ordered the original Devil May Cry games, but back in 2001 it was mainly to guarantee a copy would be available at the store, not to obtain some exclusive loot.
Purchase
- Photo:
- PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds
- PUBG Corperation
PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds released in Steam's early access program nine months before it's official release in December 2017. Soon after this, the game came out on mobile and Xbox One, although it was labeled a preview on consoles until September 2018.
As of December 2018 the game is still pretty glitchy, with frequent reports of game crashes. Of course, older games like Halo didn't have the option to release development builds early. Instead, they had to be 100% ready at launch. While it's nice to be able to fix problems after the fact, some modern games arguably exploit that luxury by selling consumers broken products.
Purchase
- Photo:
- Photo:
- Fallout 76
- Bethesda
When Fallout 76 launched on November 14, 2018, the base game took up about 45 gigabytes of hard drive space. While that's pretty standard for Xbox One/PS4 games, the massive day one patches the game received were more out of the ordinary. Before players could launch the game, they needed to download both a 25gb patch and another 30gb patch (the latter of which came out during the beta). Collectively, these patches were larger than the game was in the first place.
While day one patches don't always correlate to subpar games, players should be skeptical of massive updates, as one would hope developers shipped the game in a competent, playable state. Unfortunately, this does not appear to be the case for Fallout 76, as users have reported numerous bugs, even after multiple patches. It almost makes you miss the days when games couldn't be patched; for better or worse, whatever shipped on the disc was the complete experience.
Purchase
- Photo: