
Feedback... be more like Call of Duty: Black Ops 2
#76
Posté 03 août 2015 - 11:33
#77
Posté 03 août 2015 - 11:38
No kidding, which is why I keep saying that ME should've been a straight up shootbang with a simple story, not some ed wood schlock with faux choices. They should've done away with fluff like femshep, the faux-choices,the tommy wiseau level romances,etc and diverted the resources into refining the gameplay and creating more meaningful content.
The core TPS w/ casting gameplay is definitely the best part of the series.
But doesn't this assume that one was sacrificed for the other? There's not much basis for that.
- blahblahblah aime ceci
#78
Posté 03 août 2015 - 12:55
Off topic, but - this totally depends on the field you were entering. When I graduated, I had $200,000 in student loan debt and nothing to look forward to except years of internship/residency making bullshit pay and working over 80-100hrs/week, spending most free time on studying so I didn't fail board exams. I would kill to be back in school full time.I know not everyone is like me. That's what difficulty settings are for. BioWare could still implement what I suggested and not piss off people like you. Just to give an idea from the top of my head:
You're on a rescue mission and you have 5 minutes to rescue as many squad members as possible before a huge bomb explodes. After the 5 minutes are over you have to be clear from the blast zone or else it's game over and you have to try again. Every squad member you didn't manage to save in those 5 minutes will die.
Some people will not be satisfied unless they save all squad members. Those people have 2 options.
1) Keep trying until you succeed (this is what I would do).
2) Lower the difficulty setting to make it easier to save all squad members within the time limit (this is something I'd suggest people like you would do).
Dragon Age Inquisition already did exactly this on the Templar path and I loved it, absolutely loved it. It really gave me a sense of urgency and excitement that I rarely feel in games.
As for your comment about my supposed easy life: What the hell are you talking about? My brother recently finished university and has a full-time job now and he said life only has become easier for him. He doesn't have to worry about money or being in depth anymore, he doesn't have to spend every single evening on doing tons of homework and he can actually afford to buy a proper house now instead of having to live in a student house (like I do).
You really have no idea what my life is like so I don't really appreciate it when you're going of on a rant saying that my life is supposedly easy and will only become more difficult when I graduate, because I highly doubt that.
Eventually, life does tend to get better. But then, you have different responsibilities. Like family, a kid (I hope not anytime soon for my sake)...so I can definitely see where he was coming from. I can see where you were coming from too, and why you took offense to what he said. I just think you overlooked that it actually depends on what you do in life.
#79
Posté 03 août 2015 - 01:03
Off topic, but - this totally depends on the field you were entering. When I graduated, I had $200,000 in student loan debt and nothing to look forward to except years of internship/residency making bullshit pay and working over 80-100hrs/week. I would kill to be back in school full time.
Eventually, life does tend to get better. But then, you have different responsibilities. Like family, a kid (I hope not anytime soon for my sake)...so I can definitely see where he was coming from. I can see where you were coming from too, and why you took offense to what he said. I just think you overlooked that it actually depends on what you do in life.
No doubt that for some people life gets harder after graduation. I never denied that. If anything, it was the person who I was talking to who automatically assumed that my life is easy and will only get harder after graduation just because (s)he had such an experience himself/herself. So really, you're barking up the wrong tree here.
I'm not worried about my future as I already have a degree and already have work (I'm working on a 2nd degree now). I'm not wasting my time on bullcrap studies so having to slog through BS internships for BS pay is not something I have to worry about.
#80
Posté 03 août 2015 - 01:39
No doubt that for some people life gets harder after graduation. I never denied that. If anything, it was the person who I was talking to who automatically assumed that my life is easy and will only get harder after graduation just because (s)he had such an experience himself/herself. So really, you're barking up the wrong tree here.
I'm not worried about my future as I already have a degree and already have work (I'm working on a 2nd degree now). I'm not wasting my time on bullcrap studies so having to slog through BS internships for BS pay is not something I have to worry about.
Chill out, I was just saying I can see where both of you are coming from. Also, I dont really think that practicing medicine counts as "bullcrap studies", but maybe it does. After graduation, living below the poverty line and working twice as much as everyone I knew, I questioned deciding to switch my career from genetics to medicine all the time. But, its one of those things where there is a reward from a job that isn't monetary too.





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