The problem is, of course, this is only if it works If it DOESN'T work, if I try one too many times to go somewhere and get "This door is mysteriously locked", I'll just go "Fuck this" and your effort was wasted
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Replying to @arthur_affect @segfaultvicta and
Idk, man, I feel like this is more a self-perpetuated meme than a reality. A lot of open world enthusiasts take it as gospel but I haven't actually seen a lot of evidence it's true and a fair bit of contradictory evidence in how exhausted and sick of open worlds people are.
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Replying to @loudpenitent @arthur_affect and
A LOT of people are extremely tired of sandbox games, it's one reason ND et al are so successful. Lots of folks want a focused, episodic experience
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Replying to @loudpenitent @arthur_affect and
I think you're both right. Naughty Dog stands out bc they are able to repeatedly make non-sandbox levels that feel real. Other studios often fail at that (or have to rely on artificial limiting factors like "trapped on a space station" etc)
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Replying to @BootlegGirl @loudpenitent and
This is a personal thing but i find the linearity of the levels slam dunks any immersion i might have cause im so aware of the funnel im being led down.
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Replying to @Plutoburns @BootlegGirl and
Yes It works as long as it works As soon as something breaks the illusion - maybe not even something intentional, a bug or a glitch - I suddenly become really aware I'm on a stage with props and scenery and the magic is gone
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Plutoburns and
It's like the saga of Telltale Games and how no future game had the same magic and the same punch as the first Walking Dead Because it soon became clear that all the ominous "X will remember that" stuff was just bullshit
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Plutoburns and
A magic trick is really amazing the first time you see it, when you can actually imagine that everything that's happening is arbitrary and unexpected that led to something impossible
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Plutoburns and
It becomes a lot less cool when you watch the trick being done a hundred times in a row and you see the magician having to do the same things in the same order every time and it's impossible not to figure out what the trick must be and that it's pretty simple
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Plutoburns and
Reminds me of Penn and Teller explaining that if a magician does the same thing 3 times, they need to do it with 3 different techniques. So when someone figures out how you palmed the cigarette the first time, the second time convinces them they had it wrong.
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Yup There's a famous story of "The World's Best Card Trick" where a magician at a gathering of pro magicians told them he bet he could stump them and proceeded to spend an hour repeatedly finding people's card again and again
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Troyliss and
And every time someone proposed a mechanism for the trick he disproved it - that the deck wasn't shuffled, that he was using sleight of hand, that he was forcing the selection
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Troyliss and
Because, of course, the big lie in the name of "The World's Best Card Trick" was the use of the singular He was actually doing different card tricks, one after another, and misdirecting people into not noticing that when he eliminated one avenue of deception he opened another
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