AlienALX
Well-known member
When The Division was first shown off years ago, I thought this could be perfect for me. Then I found out that it was going to be heavily MP and online, I lost a lot of interest. While it may have been too early to tell for sure, the game ended up being well received in general but was mired by the same crap that online gameplay is usually mired by: idiots and microtransactions.
I really don't want to sound like a venerable old tosser but believe me, games these days are truly crap.
When I was a kid it was all about making games better. Sure, the money came along with it *but* the envelope was constantly being pushed and graphics and gaming worlds grew bigger etc. A decent one player romp back then would last you weeks. Half Life, for example. Then they come along with games with practically no content but "Here look, you can play with your mates !". Prices soar, content shrunk and basically in the end you would end up with a £35 game that had four interactive maps in them that relied on you and your mates to make the gameplay.
Now sure, things like Left 4 Dead (and 2) were a lot of fun but pretty lazy really. If you compare it to Half Life 2 you can clearly see that L4D involves less than an afternoon of gameplay to do all of the levels. The fun was in playing with your friends.
Now? it is all about providing less for more. Companies like EA want to spend as little money and as little time as is humanly possible developing games, then sell them for as much money as they can get their fat little mitts on.
Which is why I have been like NBD for over a decade. I have legally purchased about three games from EA since 2007. One was the latest NFS because it did actually have a bugger load of content. Other than that I have mostly downloaded them illegally, installed them, went "meh" and deleted them from my system completely.
We are starting to go in reverse now though. People are bored of playing online and want to be more hermit like.