What’s modern gaming convention that should no longer be practiced?

  • Mdu5t@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Less market prediction (what gamers want) more risk in unique games. I think we are at a point were we need more innovation a lot of games are dull and bland. Rarely anything stands out.

    • GhoulArtist@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      And we will never get that as long as shareholders and the executives trying to please them dictate creative decisions from the top down. This is why we have mountains of bland games these days.

      • Solesaver@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        That’s not really the problem…

        The problem is that the returns aren’t good enough to support the risk. With AAA budgets, you need to hit ~top 5 of the year to make any money. That means broad appeal. Broad appeal and experimental do go well together.

        I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it a million more times. Until games can be priced such that a mediocre AAA game can see a modestly successful profit, and one flop doesn’t tank a studio, this is the gaming landscape we’re stuck with. When people get their panties in a bunch about how profitable (aka greedy) the games industry is, they completely leave it the part where the overwhelming majority of that is tied up in the things that they hate. The AAA box product model just isn’t paying the bills. GotY does under that model, but the average is not great.

        Also, people like to grab numbers without actually understanding the context. I see a lot of, “game X had a $500 million budget, and sold 15 million copies. That’s a 50% ROI, which is huge!” Ok, first of all, they do not take home the full box price, so it’s actually closer to 20% ROI. Second, that cool half-bil was locked into an investment over at least 5 years, making an average yearly ROI closer to the 5-10% range, which is worse than the market average. Finally, games is very boom or bust. There was a very real risk that they only sold a couple million copies, such would have been a massive loss.

        So… How risky would you want someone to be if you loaned them 50k, and in 5 years they should be able to give you 60k, but also if things don’t work out you might only get 10k back. The math just doesn’t add up for risky AAA box product games. If 1-5 million copies was the break even point, you’d see a lot more innovation.

        • GhoulArtist@alien.topB
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          10 months ago

          If the returns aren’t good enough it’s because we’ve created this landscape where graphics, features, and general technology are so complicated that the cost of making them is incredibly high.

          The other issue is something your comment demonstrates perfectly. Games are now primarily business ventures first, art second.

          20 years ago the aspirations for studios was to make great games for the arts sake and get paid decent enough to live well so they could keep doing it (this model still exists in the indie game landscape and does quite well). Now it’s all about ROI percentages and lining CEO pockets with ridiculous salaries and bonuses. Just like every other industry that’s become complete unbalanced with runaway capitalism.

          The game industry has become completely warped by this paradigm. AAA Games now exist purely as a business venture. Giant companies have acquired almost all of the smaller studios so this mentality is all that is left.

          “How can we innovate and make great art while getting paid” has turned into “Will this product return the investment to shareholders”. That is now the sole purpose in gaming studios today. It actually being a good game is just a secondary bonus that might mean better investment opportunities with it in the future.

          Of course this is not just an issue with the video game industry. Obviously it’s part of the greater issue of the type of runaway greed that this system encourages. This has infected most industries now. Its part of why things are so out of balance between the worker and the c-suite execs.

          TLDR: Giant mega companies who’s only purpose is to make insane amounts of money bought out all of the studios that used to have a balance of creating great art and getting paid enough to keep doing it.

          • Solesaver@alien.topB
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            10 months ago

            I don’t think that’s entirely fair. You can begrudge the big budgets all you want, but the market had proven time and again that that’s what players want. If a studio doesn’t get the indie pass, players are all over them for being “lazy” and cutting corners. “You’re a big studio, with plenty of money. You can afford to do X, Y, and Z. Stop being so greedy.”

            My point was that we’ve entered an age where player expectations are so divorced from reality that there’s just no winning anymore. Any studio that isn’t perceived as “indie” enough is expected to spend hundreds of millions of dollars developing the new blockbuster. Even then, when such a studio releases a massive hit expectations skyrocket. Developers have ambitions, and ambitions cost money.

            No one is going to argue that greed isn’t driving some parts of the industry, but it’s not that simple. If you’re a billionaire and want to patronize a development studio to make a game for the artistry of it, think about what happens. You front the hundreds of millions of dollars. Best case scenario you’re not totally regretting doing that instead of sticking your money in an index fund. You make your money back, and can re-invest it in the next project. Worst case scenario you burn through the cash and don’t even have a finished game to show for it before you have to pull the plug length hundreds of employees in the lurch (this has happened). Average case you release a mediocre game for a niche audience and lose money.

            Best case scenario you get to do it again. Most likely the you can afford to fund one big artistic vision and then the money is gone. A healthy business gets to keep making games. The games people want haven’t been disappearing because of some opportunity cost gobbling up all the game development resources. They’re disappearing because the profit is so low that one wrong move and the non “greedy” investor is out of money.

            The industry will start producing more niche, artistic, and interesting games when it the average case is actually profitable. Until then they’re going to have to keep chasing the cash cows just to keep the lights on. The artistry is there, people just can’t afford it.

    • Raaazzle@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      See also: Everything. The big fish swallow the little fish and crap out balance sheets.

      • 2020Hills@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        You should try to look more into indie games, My friends. I recommend watching some games by the big guy, Razbuten on YouTube for some incredible Under the radar games

        • Cocainely@alien.topB
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          10 months ago

          indie games are an awesome genre, and some get it done juuust right. I’ve been obsessed with indie roguelites since I was 11 years old (still haven’t gotten into hades, I tried but I didn’t try that much admittedly)

        • potatojayy@alien.topB
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          10 months ago

          Indie games have become my jam. I second this. It’s weird how some gamers think they’re above the indie scene.

          • tnel77@alien.topB
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            10 months ago

            My issue is that I’m not paying $20 for an ehhh game that has four hours of gameplay. I have GamePass and that has been really cool for those smaller games. I get to try out so many games that I would have never given a chance, and I don’t have to risk a bunch of money.

    • Free_Jelly614@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      that’s why I’m so hyped for THE FINALS and ARC Raiders. super innovative interesting games, while still at AAA quality. such a rare combination. Embark Studios is cooking some special stuff

    • Iamthe0c3an2@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Yeah watch how Among us, Fortnite and now Lethal company and fnaf blew up. It’s not graphics it’s a mix of community, streamers and youtubers and gameplay.

    • Fenor@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      go to indie games for innovation, sadly AAA companies will not try but go where the money are free

    • madTerminator@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      And when company risk to make new IP it’s ignored or hated. „Starfield is bland” everywhere. Bland is situation when almost all GOTY candidates are sequel or remakes.

    • orbitaldragon@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      On the flip side of that… stop ruining beloved franchises by completely changing the core fundamentals of the series and slapping the same name on it.

      Just go make a new game and let me have what I love… yes… I’m talking about Zelda, Final Fantasy, and Assassins Creed.

    • maxster351@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      ?? What do you mean?? You don’t want another battle royale or a slightly tweaked clone of a viral game??

      I understand genres but damn is it insane to see the same game released with an entirely identical gameplay just visually different or with one new, menial, feature.

    • IlijaRolovic@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Support indie games by BUYING them then.

      Corporations are not going to build the next genre-defining game like Minecraft - a lonewolf gamedev from Sidney will collab with a random chick from Buenos Aires and a ussualy drunk and high bro from Colorado to create the next gem.

      The smaller an organization is, the more risk, creativity, experimentation, and effort it can take. Corporations have shareholders to think of - thats why Morrowind is a game that more-or-less defined the open-world RPGs, and Starfield is meh.

    • Heavy_Cartographer73@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      This is Hollywood too. I haven’t been excited or impressed by a movie in almost a decade. I have no problem waiting a month for it to stream, TBH. Who cares about spoilers when there’s no story that’s unpredictable.

    • therealjoshua@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      I think James Gunn said something similar about movies. Your job as a creator/artist/etc is not to make what people are demanding or predict the market or whatever, your job is create something that people will enjoy, even if they haven’t thought of it yet themselves.

    • chefjmcg@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      With the cost of making AAA games, I don’t see this happening any time soon…

    • Pattern_Is_Movement@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      “rarely anything stands out” we are literally in a golden age of gaming, small groups of developers continue to innovate and create entire new genres that are endlessly more popular than the status quo.

      If all you’re looking at is the big developers then you are the one censuring yourself.

      • Zannerman@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        I’d love to see the innovation that could be made possible with a AAA budget though.

        Indies will always be there forwarding the medium, but most are limited in scope or budget.

    • epic4evr11@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Really, really hoping that AW2 and BG3 might start a turn in the tide but not feeling optimistic

    • BeerandSandals@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      We lost it once these publishers went public.

      Look at the internet, hell Google was renowned for its excellent results. Now the first page is paid placement and ads.

      Video games are no longer about the passion of the early 2000s, it’s about squeezing blood from a stone.

    • percyman34@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Yes definitely. Honestly I think the last game that stood to me as being unique was probably Valheim.

    • TaylorTardy@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      a lot of games are dull and bland. Rarely anything stands out.

      That’s what happens when you try to pander to everyone and ignore any core group you might have, what you end up with is bland forgettable nothing. TES IV is going to be absolute crap.