• Cyrus Draegur@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    To be fair, most of the cosmos in real life is literally empty. However, realism is overrated. The whole reason we play video games is because real life sucks.

    • Kichae@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I mean, some of us play sci-fi games because we want to experience the reality that’s still out of reach to us.

      Not Bethesda products, of course, but, you know. Games.

    • Psythik@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Unless it’s a driving game. Arcade-style racers just aren’t fun. You barely have to use the brakes (if at all), and the AI cheats. I much rather play a racing sim.

      Otherwise I agree.

      • Sami_Uso@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I have a sim race setup in my living room and play ACC and compete in iracing events. That being said, you’re not going to tell me Burnout Paradise isn’t fun. It serves a purpose. I don’t go into it looking for ACC level brake temperatures or tire wear, i go into it to drive 150mph around corners and smash into other cars.

        • didnt_readit@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Oh man I totally forgot about that game. Used to play it in the arcade using those mag stripe cards that would save your progress…good times

    • Sethayy@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      And like of we were space faring, you think that shit wouldn’t be capitalized on?? If there was a dollar to make on it someone would be there, and that alone opens so many possibilities for world building

      • Cyrus Draegur@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        This borders upon one of my favorite topics actually - there ARE resources up there, which WOULD be valuable, but the cost of getting machinery and equipment up there is literally astronomical. Little known in public circles is the additional (and also enormous) cost of getting shit back down safely.

        In order to be cost effective, the stuff we put into space would need to stay there. Asteroid mining is only better than break-even in terms of resources if it DOESN’T come back to earth! For instance, if we had an orbital (or lunar) habitat for refining and manufacturing, where an asteroid capture and retrieval vehicle can be built, fueled, and launched, and then return to, ONLY THEN would it bring back more useful minerals, chemical compounds, and other materials than it would take to launch…

        … because the simple fact is that it takes a shit ton of energy to leave Earth’s gravity well and destroys a lot of resources in terms of making (and surviving) that journey.

        And then instead of building stuff on earth that consume an order of magnitude more than their construction in just transit, we can build it ALREADY UP THERE. That brings us to the last problem, though:

        It’s no use to any person except someone who is already up there, too.

        I’m not even talking about money cost here. Money has no point here until there are humans who want things and need a means by which to measure those wants against the context of what productive capacity is available, represent the magnitude of their want, and represent the transfer of material goods to satisfy those wants. AKA respectively a store of value, unit of account, and medium exchange–the definition of currency.

        Space will only be profitable in space.

        • Sethayy@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Space elevator dude, then your only cost is the energy to counteract gravity - which brings the second cooler idea I just had; Solar panel filled planets - cause what else would you do with all the raw material and surface area (thermal based or silicon, both could be easily setup with natural materials on an empty planet)

          Edit cause I forgot to say we already have materials with the right tensile strength to theoretically hold a boulder in orbit, just not enough to get there. but we would in 300 years

  • Yepthatsme@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I spent 20 hours exploring one solar system alone. Yea some planets are empty. Not many though. The complaints so far are really shallow.

    • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Man you can spend so much time digging through a base to find neat shit and story

      shallow isn’t what I’d call these complaints, I’d call them childish. I’m having a ton of fun

      • Aermis@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Right? There’s so effing much to do. I’m about to dive into building my first outpost and I’ve already put in 30 hours into the game in the first 3 star systems without tackling more than a couple side quests. Doing the alben quest line right now and it’s so much fun.

        Someone said go play NMS because it’s better? Ffs no it’s not.

        I don’t get any of the complaints yet. Except for the local map. Wtf were they thinking. I thought it was a bug. And maybe the item menus. I need to see more.

      • DarkThoughts@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I’ve heard this phrase, or iterations of it, so many times over the years, especially in regards to space games, that I’m convinced the people spewing it constantly have absolutely no idea what a deep space game actually is. I think they’re just there to complain regardless of how much depth there is.

    • guriinii@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yeah… People are complaining about features of a game they already knew existed.

    • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      The people having fun aren’t the ones writing these knee-jerk critiques. They’re the ones engrossed in the game atm and their opinions will be better reflected once they’re done.

      There’s a lot of reason for the haters to hate on this one. Bethesda game, no space travel like NMS, no PS5 release. All things which were either a given or should have otherwise been obvious, but still, clicks are clicks and so any reason to hate is reason enough.

      • rgb3x3@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        After 30 hours, I’ve honestly seen no reason to upgrade my ship. It’s just a speed bump to fast travel.

        And the main critique I have is that there isn’t any real discovery. When you go to most of the new planets, you’re given one to three points of interest, you land there, and see an “abandoned [something]” overrun with enemies. You clear them out, generally get nothing of value, then move on. It’s quite repetitive gameplay.

        Outside of following quest lines, there’s not much reason to explore.

        I kinda feel like I’m just passing time, but not really having fun. Still, it’s one of those games that I don’t want to stop playing because I do actually want to see where the main story goes.

  • FMT99@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I really don’t think the empty planets are the problem. Space Engineers has empty planets. Stationeers has empty planets. But they have interesting things to do on those empty planets. Problems to solve. Systems to build and improve.

    Everything in Starfield feels like more clicking through (horribly outdated) menus and inventory screens. Between those and the loading screens, the only time the game is really fun is when you’re shooting pirates. But there are games that do that part much much better.

    I think that’s how I’d summarize the whole game: lots of things to do but none of it has any depth and everything has been done much better elsewhere.

    • massive_bereavement@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      When they said this would be hard sci-fi, I actually imagined myself piloting an actual space ship and doing astronaut things, not a glorified magic plane.

      If someone is looking for what Starfield offers but better, here are my recommendations at a fraction of cost:

      • Space combat, but better: Everspace, Everspace 2, House of the Dying Sun, Chorus, FTL
      • Hard(ish) Sci-fi shooter, but better: Titanfall 2, Call of Duty Infinity Warfare, Mass Effect (technically not FPS)
      • Exploration, but better: Outer wilds, No Man’s Sky, Astroneer, Deep Rock Galactic (I would say subnautica but that’s not really space).
      • Privateering, but better: Star traders: Frontiers (Though not 3D).

      Maybe the issue is that this game, like NMS before, tried to be everything to everyone and didn’t develop towards something meaningful.

      Hopefully, like NMS will find its soul and develop into something worth playing. (IMO)

      EDIT: This is a stealthy way of getting recommendations ;)

      • Wahots@pawb.social
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        1 year ago

        If you like these sorts of games (particularly games like Titanfall and Subnautica, or DRG), you might really like Elite Dangerous. Has a big learning curve, but it’s a “once every decade or two” game when it comes to scratching a deep deep Sci fi itch. 1:1* milky way, set thousands of years in the future, with a variety of ships and missions,with excellent HOTAS and VR support. Co-op up to five people, even more if you are in a public server. FPS game with a variety of vehicles, from small cars to aircraft carriers 4x the length of the burj Khalifa.

        • the milky way is cut down slightly, as the core of our galaxy is so dense with stars, it melts computers and makes it impossible to fly between stars, which are almost as dense as sand in a sandbox.
        • Katana314@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          My memory of Elite Dangerous is trying to start auto-undocking, and the flight computer putting me on hold because of another person floating around in the docking bay. Eventually, it aborted the auto-undock; and the tutorial had not taught me how to release the controls to manually undock. So, eventually the station’s security systems flagged me as flying in unpermitted space and destroyed my ship.

          So that does seem to echo the “big learning curve” bit.

          • Wahots@pawb.social
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            1 year ago

            The tutorials are a bit rough, haha. I found the actual game easier. There’s some great YouTube guides that help with the basics, how to make money easily, how to get certain ships, etc. Makes the game a lot easier. :)

        • buzziebee@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Elite is fantastic at being Elite, I’m actually glad starfield isn’t like elite though. Elite is all about the beautiful desolation of space, and the attempts of humanity to carve out a place in that desolation. But there’s not really any story or characters or much stuff that isn’t procedurally generated. It’s just you and the grind in a really pretty world.

          When I have an itch that elite will scratch I pop on and enjoy being in the cockpit (especially in VR). Im playing starfield to scratch that BGS rpg itch. If I had to manually jump from system to system and fly my ship in to land everytime I want to do a small quest I’d be really put off of starfield.

          • massive_bereavement@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I think my biggest pet peeve with Starfield is the whole looter aproach all Bethesda games have, which means during the first mission, I spent more time rumaging through stuff and figuring out how to break into rooms to get more loot than actually playing the mission.

            Not because I like looting, but because I think that if I miss an important item, at some point in the game I’ll be locked out of it and require grinding which is my kryptonite.

            • buzziebee@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Oh yeah I definitely feel the inventory management pain issue lol. Some people have been complaining that you can’t open every draw in every room, there’s so so much loot already that I’m glad tbh that it’s usually only yellow crates and bodies that are worth looting. Having a ship with a large inventory helps massively for me. I can dump all my resources in there, and dump all the armour and loot me and my companions haul back from missing a there, them just go on a selling spree in between a few missions. Almost hit a million in income and 90% of that is from loot from killed enemies.

              At level 25 now so starting to hit a real limit on how much money shopkeepers have. Would be nice to unlock richer traders, or do missions for them which gives them more capital or something. It’ll probably mean that I only bother looting things worth 5k or something going forward as otherwise it’s more mass than worth the effort looting and selling. Maybe that’s an intentional game design? Force people to not spend all day looting and managing inventory space?

        • Tathas@programming.dev
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          1 year ago

          I haven’t played Elite Dangerous since the first year it came out. At that time it was the very definition of “A mile wide and an inch deep” though.

          Has it gotten any deeper?

          • Wahots@pawb.social
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            1 year ago

            If you haven’t played since 2014, it has gotten a lot deeper, haha. Hell, there’s even a whole human civilization around Sag A* these days.

            • riceandbeans161@discuss.tchncs.de
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              1 year ago

              i remember doing the run to Sag A* in a single day a few years ago. In full VR with HOTAS. Experiencing that black hole like that is still one of my best gaming memories of all time.

              The fact that there’s now a full human civilisation out there blows my mind.

            • Tathas@programming.dev
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              1 year ago

              Hah oh yeah? I had been part of some organized effort in the early days to flip a system ownership, and after a large amount of people working hard on missions for a couple months, they finally admitted that it wasn’t functional yet.

      • jet@hackertalks.com
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        1 year ago

        Surprised you didn’t mention the star citizen and space engineers. They have that I’m a space mining cowboy aspect nailed down pretty well.

          • jet@hackertalks.com
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            1 year ago

            Mostly true, but it is playable and amazing. I’m in love with the fact I can go from waking up in a bunk, to a space station, to mining a airless moon, all without loading screens seamlessly. Super immersive.

            Buggy as all get out, lol

      • pimento64@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Privateering, but better: Star traders: Frontiers (Though not 3D).

        Also Endless Sky, which is free

      • HarkMahlberg@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Exploration and Space combat: Endless Space 2. I have my share of problems with that game but it’s effectively Civilization In Space. You can explore star systems, and you can fight space pirates.

        • massive_bereavement@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I love mods, but often they come with the trade-off of balancing issues.
          A big chunk in gameplay design and development is balancing and while I agree some mods are great, they tend to mess with balance heavily, making it either easier or a whole spiky mess.

      • CIWS-30@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Thanks for the recommendations! I’ll look into these, and already have dipped my feet into stuff like Everspace 2 and Outer Wilds. Some of these are on Xbox Game Pass as well, which is cool.

      • Zeusbottom@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        When they said this would be hard sci-fi, I actually imagined myself piloting an actual space ship and doing astronaut things

        So, KSP 1&2 then? :)

    • EvilMonkeySlayer@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I think for me everything doesn’t feel connected, to go anywhere it’s always a loading screen. It is very clearly a limitation of their engine, but it just makes everything feel disconnected.

      • Demigodrick@lemmy.zipM
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        1 year ago

        I think this is my issue too. Oblivion and Skryim had loading screens sure, but everything felt connected and purposeful - the whole spaceship mechanic can be entirely skipped with fast travel and just leaves everything so disconnected.

      • Katana314@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’m actually curious how it would feel if it went Half-Life 2’s route; keep the transitions in first-person view, and put up loading indicators when needed, but at least let people see/feel the transition to the next thing.

        It probably would have done a lot if, after selecting a nav point to go to, you actually pushed a “Enter hyperspace” throttle on the dash, and then got a loading screen with the stars flying past.

    • Notorious_handholder@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Everything in Starfield feels like more clicking through (horribly outdated) menus and inventory screens. Between those and the loading screens, the only time the game is really fun is when you’re shooting pirates. But there are games that do that part much much better.

      This is just a summary of modern Bethesda games in a nutshell, except forgetting to mention bugs as well.

      I really don’t know what people where expecting with Starfield

      • OscarRobin@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        No it really isn’t. In all prior Bethesda games you could get from any place in the world to any other just by walking and maybe some loading screens if you’re going from/to a city or dungeon. In Starfield you have to use menus and loading screens to get from most places to most other places.

        Also, Starfield places more emphasis on amassing items due to having resources etc than the previous-worst Fallout 4, and all prior Bethesda games didn’t have resources to manage, just items.

        So no, while Starfield is very much like previous Bethesda games, many flaws and issues are exacerbated.

        • Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          I’d like to know how many of you actually WALKED everywhere in Skyrim or Fallout, I tried it once, boring as fuck and extremely irritating when a quest took me from one side of the map to the other and back. Fast traveling is good and a majority of people that play their game use it almost exclusively where possible.

          Y’all are delusional if you think people want to play walking simulators all the time in their RPGs, it’s a very small group who plays them that way.

          • kmkz_ninja@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Because walking from one side of skyrims map to the other and back is TOTALLY the same as just being able to walk from Riften to Whiterun. The equivalent of which you wouldn’t be able to do in Starfield.

            • Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Riften to Whiterun is like half the distance from solitude to Riften, walking between either is a chore and 99% of players wouldn’t or don’t do it.

              Tho comparing it to Starfield is sorta hilarious because Starfield is absolutely massive and even games like NMS require going into menus to jump between systems.

              Do I wish Starfield was more like NMS in that you can relatively seamless take off, fly to another planet, land, do it all over again? Yeah that’d be pretty sweet. Do I also know that the world’s in NMS are way way less interesting and detailed overall and the storyline/NPC interactions are very basic? Yes I do.

              Different strengths and different end goals for the games

        • CIWS-30@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I think Microsoft can be thanked for that. They buckled down and lent their support to make sure Starfield didn’t have constant crashes and backwards flying spaceships and whatnot.

      • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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        1 year ago

        I could understand expecting improvements before they actually showed the game off; but after the very first gameplay reveal, it should have been pretty obvious to anyone familiar with BGS that it was going to be the same as Skyrim and Fallout 4, but with a different aesthetic and theme.

        Everything Starfield does to blow my expectations is that it’s surprisingly stable and bug free. I’m playing it with a 1660 Super and it’s actually playable (I mean, only 30 fps when outside); the card isn’t even supported! Fallout 4 wasn’t even playable at launch (single digit fps when anywhere near Boston) and I had the recommended specs for it.

  • Billegh@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    That’s at least a step up from No Man’s Sky, which promised unexplored universes. It then delivered every planet already having a base of at least one alien race.

    At this point I would welcome literal empty planets.

    • Squids@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      That did actually get fixed later on (like in 2018) - there’s now undiscovered systems that you can stumble across, along with abandoned systems. Can kinda see why it took a while to get added - undiscovered systems are kinda…boring.

      The sentinels are there, but that’s because they’re basically semi-divine beings and seperate from everything

      • Chailles@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It doesn’t fix the main problem I have with it. There’s no magic to finding a new species of plant or animal because every other system has like 30 of them per planet/moon. Like whats the point of naming anything when you’ll find something near identical to it in an hour?

  • NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I really can’t decide if I agree or not. Only had a chance to play 4 hours or so. My main impression so far is the menus are clunky and I hate how reliant travel is on the menu system. Doesn’t feel like I’m actually piloting anything

    • Axxi@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      My argument for why landing on the moon wasn’t boring is they actually got to pilot the ship, landing it safely on the surface. If the astronauts had a cut scene where they were suddenly landing safely just so they could then fast travel home, having nothing to do on the surface would’ve been far more of an issue.

    • thesprongler@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I thought that fast-travel-via-menu was clunky too after 4 hours. Then I realized you don’t need to use the menus to fast travel, it’s just perhaps clunkier to do so from your cockpit. Aim at a planet, go into scan mode, then tap A and hold X (on controller). Here’s a video demoing it.

      There are several less than intuitive features in the game that I’m slowing discovering by paying more attention to the prompts at the bottom of the screen. I may have missed a tooltip but it seems this is a very common one based on negative feedback.

      • BaroqueInMind@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        200 million dollar budget, as large as a summer blockbuster film, yet a dude with his free time fixed an issue that was the devs responsibility. Remind me why this game is $70?

        • c0c0c0@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          UI elements are usually designed to work on the lowest common denominator. Small screens, struggling cpus, etc. Modders don’t care about any of that.

          • FrankFrankson@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            This game runs like poop on anything but newer hardware so I highly doubt the crappy UI was developers being considerate of small screens and struggling CPUs and instead it’s probably because Bethesda games always have a shit inventory UI. This game’s inventory UI is a small step up from Fallout 4 but still no where near as good as the DEF_HUD or FallUI mods for Fallout 4.

            • Katana314@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              My GPU is actually below the minimum specs. The game auto-adjusted itself to look kinda ugly with a lot of blurring, but I will admit, they manage to still make it run decently given what it’s working with. (I am thinking of switching over to my Series S though)

              • FrankFrankson@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                It’s rough on CPUs and GPUs. If CPU is below a certain threshold you are never getting above 30-40 fps no matter what. There are some performance mods you might want to try out. Most of them are just ini settings but some recompress textures and stuff. In a few months it should be possible to run Starfield while not looking too ugly on a low end system with mods.

        • EvilMonkeySlayer@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          The people who’re emotionally invested in something will almost always make something better than the developers themselves.

          • snooggums@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Part of that is the ability to focus on improving on all of the work that already exists and the other part is being able to unilaterally make decisions while being emotionally invested.

            Developers are often spending the majority of the time making sure whatever gameplay exists passes testing without breaking the overall compromise vision that is limited by time and money for deadlines. Companies don’t allow enough time for polish and frequently have decisions made based on the added cost of labor and testing tha mods don’t have since mods having bugs is an acceptable situation for people while a company putting out bugs is generally met with hostility. Different levels of standards and costs have a huge impact on why many mods vastly improve the game in ways that don’t fit into the game development process.

            Plus a lot of mods are focused on a specific part and don’t appeal to the playerbase as a whole.

      • thesprongler@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Do Nexus mods disable steam achievements, or is there a mod that prevents that? I’m a filthy achievement hunter and at least for my first playthrough I want to grab as many as I can. But I don’t consider mods like this to be cheating.

    • JJROKCZ@lemmy.world
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      Yea that’s my main problem so far, I don’t understand how NMS and space engineers both allow seamless travel from space to atmosphere but this major studio game forces me to open up the map and select land. Hopefully a mod fixes it because this is pretty atrocious for $70

      • Skiptrace@lemmy.one
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        It’s an engine limitation. The Engine that Bethesda holds onto with an iron fist is what hampers their games.

        However, the opposite side of the coin is, that it makes them super easy to modify, so people can make their own additions. Because Starfield is using the same engine as Skyrim and Fallout 4.

        • Archmage Azor@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I don’t know if a better, modded flight system would be possible really. That looks like something so ingrained into the foundation of Starfield it would have had to be changed during production

        • c0c0c0@lemmy.world
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          This is why I cut them slack. I’d rather have the clunky mechanics than lose the vibrant modding platform.

      • Dax87@forum.stellarcastle.net
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        I haven’t played NMS, but watched a lot of videos regarding simulating planets, atmosphere (and transitioning to-from space) around the time it was hyped, and assumed that’s what NMS is doing. Which is (maybe? I haven’t played) why you can walk around the whole planet, and take off and turn around and see that same planet from space without loading, etc.

        NMS as I understand it is a simulation first, sandbox second.

        Starfield sounds like Spacerim if anything, with instanced planets that are separate from space. At ground level, planets are just flat planes and you only explore a small, generated chunk at one loaded instance. It’s not actually a spherical planet when on the ground.

    • kromem@lemmy.world
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      4 hours is not enough time to get a sense of it.

      I’m pretty blown away, while at the same time recognizing why the first 15 hours are disappointing a lot of people.

      In Skyrim, you see on the map something interesting and then start heading there discovering things along the way.

      In Fallout, maybe you see a tower of a building or a bridge.

      In this game, everything is ‘hidden’ behind navigation screens.

      It’s probably the largest distribution of open world content across an open world to date, but it feels very much like you are walking around with blinders on.

      But a lot of the issues I had early on were with approaching it like it was a Skyrim or a Fallout, as a map to be fully explored, looking in every crate or looting every enemy, etc.

      The entire paradigm of the game is different from anything I’ve played before.

      Space is a backdrop for the establishment of a living RPG universe. It throws in radiant system stuff for small missions to pick up credits here and there if you like, and tons of handcrafted side quest distractions.

      It’s a brilliant play by Bethesda particularly for Microsoft, as this is effectively a live service single player game, that subscribers to GamePass will continue to stay playing for months. The opportunities for additional content being worked into it is literally endless.

      The problem is that it’s very hard to communicate that scale and scope in the first few hours. So you are running around a more linear tutorial phase without the mystery and enticing that a viewable open world delivers.

      It’s pretty wild to see the shift from players of “this is disappointing” to “this is incredible” as the number of hours in the game increases.

      I actually wonder in terms of the ratings what the actual playtime was for each review relative to the score.

      It might not be a game for everyone, but it’s probably more of a game for everyone than any previous Bethesda RPG. It just takes a while to find that scope for any given player.

      Some of the criticisms are ridiculous though. Like I saw a new piece that actually claimed navigating the universe would be more fun if it worked like Elite: Dangerous, which it said was immersive and quick with its FSD.

      I can just imagine having a quest at Hutton Orbital (takes an hour and a half real time) and watching the reviews had they needed to actually leg it to the destination.

      It is its own thing.

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    “Everyone’s concerned that empty planets are going to be boring. But when the astronauts went to the moon, there was nothing there. They certainly weren’t bored.”

    Um, yeah, because going to the moon was a novel thing in 1969. It isn’t 360 years later. Reminds me of the Futurama pilot when Fry was excited to go to the moon and it was just another boring trip for everyone else.

    • The Barto@sh.itjust.works
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      Also, they actually went to the moon, not play a game where they went to the moon, being on an empty moon would be way more thrilling of an experience than playing a video game.

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    It’s true, some of them ARE empty by design…but the problem is, a world with life on it in Starfield is barely more interesting than the barren rock. It is still almost ALL randomly generated, there just happens to be more wildlife to scan while you run across the boring landscape, and maybe an animal will try to kill you.

    Oh, and the pointless radiant quest you get will be from a solar farm on the nice planet, instead of a mining platform on the barren one. There is very little difference.

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        I don’t necessarily mind them, but they seem to be out of control in this one. I ran from the UC place in Atlantis to my ship, landed on Mars, ran into the town to a quest giver, and when I opened my map next, I had dots ALL OVER IT.

        I popped open my quest log, and there were 11 random quests I didn’t even realize I had hoovered up just running from location to location. The thing that kind of bothers me about it is that that’s more than double the amount of quests I had intentionally picked up.

        It’s okay if I explore and uncover some of these myself, Todd.

        • DarkThoughts@kbin.social
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          A lot of those come from you “overhearing” NPCs talk. But often you’re completely out of range, or there’s so many NPCs brabbling that you can’t make anything out anyway and suddenly the questlog fills up with “talk to so and so” quests, with no relation of its context (which imo is the real crime here).

            • Wahots@pawb.social
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              Radiant quests are just finding 3 slurm-slushes for the NPC, and they are in 1 of 5 predefined locations, and the reward is either 25 gold or 75 xp.

              The next quest is a quest to kill a randomly generated NPC, also in 1 of the same predefined 5 locations, for 34 gold or 99xp.

              It’s just a few objects getting called in a class in order to keep things “fresh”. But I’d argue that it’s bad game design in order to make the world feel more alive. Deep Rock Galactic took the AI director from L4D2, the randomness of minecraft and its materials, and the classes of TF2, and took radiant quests to their ultimate conclusion. And it’s great.

              • Jakeroxs@sh.itjust.works
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                Which is how the mission boards in Starfield work, the random ones you get from NPCs talking around you are almost always more in-depth then that from my almost 40 hours in Starfield thus far.

                I’m very aware of what a radiant quest is as I’ve put thousands of hours into Bethesda games and they’ve done a much better job with Starfield in my experience thus far.

                Additionally, comparing Starfield to L4D or Deep Rock Galactic simply doesn’t make sense. I’ve played both (L4D quite a bit more out of the two) and you literally can’t compare the gameplay objective between those and Starfield or beth games in general

          • Katana314@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            “HYUCK! BUY SLURM-SLUSH! GET 5 FOR 3, A LIMITED TIME ONLY!”
            Objective added: Buy Slurm-Slush.

        • ursakhiin@beehaw.org
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          I feel like they should just put the “Things you overheard” objectives in a different tab. Problem solved.

          Radiant quests aren’t bad as long as we know that’s what’s happening. We don’t want to keep on down a path if it’s not going to lead somewhere but they are useful for earning credits or xp on occasion.

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      Ugh, they are bringing back radiant quests? Did they learn nothing from Skyrim? Bare minimum, radiant quests have to be BETTER than Deep Rock Galactic missions. But better to just not have them at all, a la Baldur’s Gate 3.

      • macniel@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Hey thanks to radiant quests I now know that there is “wildlife” on Luna. Isn’t that awesome?!

    • peppersky@feddit.de
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      It doesn’t matter if you are on Jemison right next to New Atlantis, the capital of the universe, or on some random moon in nowhere, you’ll get the same abandoned buildings with spacers/pirates/mercenaries in them. And literally zero of them will have any sort of story or writing attached to them. Walking around on random planets is unbelievably repetitive.

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    I just played two hours and called it quits as I was walking, jumping, and hovering in “mid air” on Luna. No Sun to see, but the Luna Surface was … illuminated and the features threw somehow shadows? Where is the light coming from? Why is there no conversation of moment? This is truly Skyrim in space.

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    I feel like Starfield should have removed the space travel mechanics. It could instead have opted for Mass Effect style travel menu…

    Also, they could have gone for a handful of highly detailed planets.

    • EvilMonkeySlayer@kbin.social
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      I think the most fun I’ve had has been the spaceship building. I’ve only done a bit of space combat, but the spaceship builder while not perfect (like the inability to rotate parts) I quite liked.

      • pimento64@sopuli.xyz
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        the spaceship builder while not perfect (like the inability to rotate parts)

        Please tell me you’re exaggerating for humorous effect

        • Skyhighatrist@lemmy.ca
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          No, best you can do is flip a part so that the connector is on the other side. But if a part is meant to connect on a side connector, there’s no way to attach it to a top connector or bottom connector. Parts cannot be rotated.

        • EvilMonkeySlayer@kbin.social
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          Nope, you can flip some parts. But you can’t rotate them. So, for example some parts can only be attached to the sides and others to the top or bottom. (or sometimes just the bottom)

          There’s quite a few videos on youtube showing this now.

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            I have the Frontier module at the back and its blank ass is just sticking out with absolutely nothing to attach to it that wouldn’t look like an eyesore or remove the shower. Like, just give me the ability to slap my fuel tank there or maybe a little radiator or something. There definitely need to be more options.

            Still, I agree. While it has some shortcomings (like lacking descriptions & previews), the ship building and consequently being able to walk & fly around in and with your ship is amazing.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    If it was boring, nobody would want to visit the Moon or Mars IRL, and yet… People do want to do that. 🤷🏻‍♂️

    Of course, in the game even the “empty” planets are not actually empty. There are plenty of POIs to find from wrecked spaceships to clandestine bases to naturally forming caves. You just can’t find them without landing and walking around. Sometimes for hours, because the planet is huge and you can only explore it on foot.

    • Neato@kbin.social
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      Yep. It was because Outer Wilds’ planets were all hand-crafted. There are barren portions of each of them, but that just exists to showcase the parts with people, ruins and clues on them.

  • Fapper_McFapper@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I purchased this game last week but I have not had a chance to play yet. Will Xbox/Microsoft refund my purchase? These reviews are making it pretty clear that I don’t want to play this game.

    • guriinii@lemmy.world
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      Honestly, play it for yourself. People love to hate.

      I’m loving the game and am over 50 hours in.

    • Aermis@lemmy.world
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      Dude don’t listen to these shmucks. I’ve had no expectations and this is easily one of my favorite games I’ve played in a long time. Everything is amazing and beautiful. It’s stunning. If you liked skyrim and fallout you’ll love this game.

      There’s going to be a few tweaks needed with mods (local maps and better menus) but other than that you can’t ask for much more. This game is immaculate. People complain and then say there’s more depth in no man’s sky lol

      • Fapper_McFapper@lemmy.world
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        Yeah, I was just able to get about 3 hours of gameplay yesterday. Here are my observations so far.

        Combat is excellent for a Bethesda game. I’ve done the flight tutorial, showed a lot of promise until I found out you cannot control the ship’s approach or landing on the planet. I can only pick a predetermined spot to land on. That’s a bummer. Maybe later in the game I’ll have more control of the ship.

        Everything has to load. I don’t understand why except others have mentioned it is a limitation of the engine. So be it. The constant loading screens break the immersion for me.

        The ship and parts of the game feel like a rip off of NMS and Elite Dangerous. Specifically the ship system management.

        The visuals are excellent.

        The beginning of the story seemed kind of weak. I touch a piece of metal, blackout and then this complete stranger just hands over his ship.

        However, I’ve been made aware that the first 15 hours or so of gameplay are tedious, so, I’ll keep at it in hopes that things get better.

        I am also well aware that playing this game 2 hours at a time doesn’t help. Unfortunately, that’s the time I have. So I should reach the 15 hour mark in about a week or two.

        • Aermis@lemmy.world
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          I never played elite dangerous but I did NMS. I’ve also played tons of space themed games and I guess ship design gets kind of mushed together, it’s hard to come up with something unique.

          The beginning of all Bethesda games have always been a little weak in my opinion. Other than new vegas. It’s one of those “the story opens up” kind of scenarios for me. It’s rich if you have the time to read and listen to the dialog.

          As for the loading screens I’m baffled of your experience. I literally have ZERO loading times. Everything is nigh instant. The only time I get a loading screen is on fast travel and that gives me hardly enough time to read the one screen tip. But I’m also playing on a 6900 xt video card and a Samsung NVME 1TB ssd. I wish I got a 2tb one lol.

          • Fapper_McFapper@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            You are correct! I was wrong. I’ve made it to the first terrormorph and have explored 80% of the outposts/planet and I find the story to be pretty good so far.

            I also misrepresented my experience with the loading times. What I should have said is that traveling to and from the surface with loading screens breaks the immersion for me. Additionally, I don’t think it’s a deal breaker.

            The visuals and the atmosphere is fantastic.

            And lastly, I agree the beginning was pretty weak.

            • Aermis@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Haha you’re exploring literally just the surface of your first planet.

              What I recommend for you and everyone playing this game is to just focus on the main quest up to the 3rd quest “into the unknown” and once you finish that then do side quests. While doing all of that I still explored a dozen or so POI and looted everything I can. Sold everything I can in Atlantis. If I have over 10k of loot to sell I go to trading authority in the well.

              But yeah Atlantis! 3rd quest. Once that’s done everything is going to start becoming revealed. Including how important and game changing skills are. So many open up tons of new playstyles! Just unlocking security opens up tons of items in unlocking. Which I actually don’t mind compared to skyrim lockpicking. Then I unlocked level 1 persuasion and that opened new dialog in certain areas.

              Oh and for sure get boost pack training!!! That should be your very first skill.

              Piloting allows new classes of ship to be p piloted.

              Starship design (and oh yes you can make your very own starship!)

              Weapon engineering. Omg so much. I’m only lvl 20 and I’ve put in over 25 hours already. I love this game. So immersive