Dear Videogames

What’s wrong with the videogame industry this time?

Dear Videogame Industry,

 

Harder does not necessarily equal better.

 

No, I’m not referring Demon’s Souls, the difficulty is inherent in the gameplay. Instead, this is a long-standing complaint that I have, and many others do as well, they just don’t say anything. I’m saying something.

 

There are a number of ways which difficulty is poorly used. One of the most blatant and pervasive is the varying degree of difficulty within a game, as well as within a level. When a certain section simply increases the difficulty to prolong the gameplay time, it comes across as lazy development. Spending two hours trying to figure out how to defeat an early boss in a game only to have the next two fall in less than 5 minutes is wrong.

 

Of course some games ramp up the difficulty level of the game steadily, which is appropriate, especially when the player’s in-game character gains skills and abilities to overcome these enemies.

 

Sometimes a whole level will abruptly become more difficult. This is especially irritating because these types of levels stick out distinctly from the rest of the game, especially when the game afterwards turns back to its regular difficulty.

 

I have no problem with difficult bosses at the end of levels, but not being able to save the game before these battles is a crime. Especially offensive is when the boss suddenly and inexplicably has their health bar refilled while the player doesn’t. It is again, a cheap tactic that smacks of lazy programming.

 

None of this is to say that hard games don’t have a place on shelves. There’s nothing wrong with having a good challenge, but when it’s poorly implemented, it’s just… wrong.

[ Post the first comment | View related posts ]

Tags:

Posted by Daniel "monk" Pelfrey on Oct 22nd, 2009 and is filed under Blog, DS, DS Features, Monk's Blog, PC, PC Features, PS2, PS2 Features, PS3, PS3 Features, PSP, PSP Features, Wii, Wii Features, Xbox 360, Xbox 360 Features. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.
Enter your email address:
Shop At BBCAmerica.com Today!

No comments on Dear Videogames

Post a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Shop 101 Inks Today!