Can someone explain the appeal of the Witcher as a series? I'm thinking about finally taking the leap.
Can someone explain the appeal of the Witcher as a series? I'm thinking about finally taking the leap.
Can someone explain the appeal of the Witcher as a series? I'm thinking about finally taking the leap.
<Snipped quote by Dynamo Frokane>
After two mediocre games they made one that was less mediocre but still stuffed to the brim with open world bloat and lackluster combat that gets excused because it's so MORALLY GRAY MAN.
Also there are books that are not great but found their audience with certain Polish youths at an opportune time.
<Snipped quote by Fabricant451>
Right, so whats the appeal? Why should I buy it?
Right, so whats the appeal? Why should I buy it?
Okay speaking of RPGs: Someone explain the appeal of JRPGs, please. I do not understand them at all. An 'RPG' where the most level of character customization possible is that I get to name characters that already have names. At most they're story-based action games with class-and-leveling elements, and if those are all it takes to be an RPG, then CoD is a goddamn RPG. Seriously, explain what makes people like JRPGs?
The writing and storytelling in the games was always great, but people were held back from enjoying it because the combat sucked.
Now the combat sucks a lot less while the level of writing quality has stayed more or less the same. (Obviously some quests are better than others, according to personal taste.)
Okay speaking of RPGs: Someone explain the appeal of JRPGs, please. I do not understand them at all. An 'RPG' where the most level of character customization possible is that I get to name characters that already have names. At most they're story-based action games with class-and-leveling elements, and if those are all it takes to be an RPG, then CoD is a goddamn RPG. Seriously, explain what makes people like JRPGs?
'Geek as an identity' Starter Pack
@DepressedSoviet@Chrononaut@pugbutter
'Geek as an identity' Starter Pack
<Snipped quote by DepressedSoviet>
To answer your question with another question, what makes Western Rpgs roleplaying games? Most limit your choices, wheres in a "real" rpg, like DnD, you literally have unlimited choices you can make, not ones they just program in for you. You might have a DM like that, but it's much less restricted generally and the plot can literally leave his control if you're clever enough.
Roleplaying just means you "play a role". Acting is a form of roleplaying, even though you don't make any choices.
The main appeal of JRPGS are the stories and the simplistic gameplay, namely. Before we had the technology to make the sprawling expanses we have today, tech was a lot more limited. You did have some titles like Fire Emblem which combined tactics with a leveling system, but these were few and far between and much harder to make.
I honestly don't like console rpgs though, I think the only time rpgs were ever good was Planescape, Fallout 1 and 2, and Baldurs gate era + the recent release of new CRPG games like Torment: Tides of Numenera, Tyranny, Pillars of Eternity, and Wasteland 2. Dark Souls feels much more like a Metroidvania game and The Witcher series has always felt more action rpg than "typical" rpg.
Also what @Fabricant451 said.
*Pulls this thread from the abyss.* Hello!
Can someone explain the appeal of 'Vaporwave' in both a musical and aesthetic standpoint?
The music tends to be incredibly... generic. Regular music sampling in other genres have already covered the themes pretty well and, honestly, it seems to be just another name for lo-fi techno.
On top of that, the aesthetic pictures/pallets/choice of ~whatever~ has already been covered by lo-fi techno as well.
Kind of like how Disco and other genres came, had their aesthetics, then left eventually.
My main point of confusion is how it seems to be the same thing as something that already exists. It doesn't seem innovative at all.
Is this just another generation's version of "cool music/art exclusive and created by us" type of thing?
Am I right or am I missing something here?
Why do people like it so much if it's so been there done that? Why are there so many people listening to it?
Is this just another generation's version of "cool music/art exclusive and created by us" type of thing?
Am I right or am I missing something here?
Why do people like it so much if it's so been there done that? Why are there so many people listening to it?