5 Things That Video Games Do That Really Make Me Angry
I’m sure that this list could be a lot longer, but I’m going to focus on six issues that really piss me off when I’m playing video games. If games happen to have more than 2 or 3 of these traits they tend to collect dust in my game cases very quickly, or they will do the same at your local game store. So, without further adieu:
- Not being able to skip cut scenes
Sometimes, gamers just want to jump into the action. Yes, I know that designers have spent grueling hours working in their wonderful plot into the game, and skipping cut scenes may mean that the gamer will miss out on crucial story elements and possibly even essential game hints. Well, that’s just too bad, and sometimes I don’t mind taking that kind of chance. Perhaps I just need to vent a bit by blowing up some aliens or lighting a few people on fire. Another gripe I have with this is that some games don’t make the option apparent if it is available at all during a cut scene. Please make them optional. I beg you. One game I played recently that either I couldn’t skip or couldn’t figure out how to skip was Metroid Prime 3: Corruption. It’s now collecting dust in my cd case. - Bad artificial intelligence
This one is probably hated by most gamers, and we’ve all seen it. The AI runs enemy monsters or units into a wall, they can’t figure out how to path correctly to follow you, or perhaps the designer of the game just didn’t test the AI in the way that you think it should work. Well, it pretty much sucks when this happens. Rarely though is it a reason to stop playing a game, but when the AI is good it’s easy to tell, and in some cases it’s actually frightening. - Hard to use menus
This is a killer when you’re trying to get things done fast. One might think that this kind of behavior is a no brainer and should be somewhat of an industry standard by now, but sometimes game designers absolutely fail at the 2D portions of the UI. One example I love is simple and definitely proven are any of Valve’s game menus. They are somewhat of a convention in Valve’s games and they present easy options first for beginner users while also allowing more experienced users to easily whip through menu choices. Crappy menus and other UI options are very easy to spot. One of the worse things you can do is slow down a user as they’re going through the menus. Warcraft 3 does this with the stupid chain menu system, which I’ve grown to loathe. Sometimes games can fail completely in both usability and readability, the biggest example of this I can think of is Dead Rising. I couldn’t even read the menus since the text was horrible and it was laid out poorly. Ugh. - Collect-a-thons
When I was 10, I used be able to stand running around various platformer worlds gathering every last bit that games could offer me. Hell, I even got 101% in Donkey Kong 64, but I wasn’t hardcore enough to get all the stars in Super Mario 64 or all of the golden skulltulas in Ocarina of Time. Now however, I absolutely can’t stand it. Games can get by without them just fine, but for some reason developers continue to inject these endless quests. World of Warcraft could even be considered one giant collect-a-thon. I guess that this mentality appeals to some gamers, but I’m over it. And yes, I did beat Super Mario Galaxy, just with the minimum amount of stars. - Voice chat
Ah, the bane and boon of online gaming. I’ve become somewhat jaded to this miracle of modern technology, and now I’m absolutely sick of it. If I’m playing an FPS, I’m there to snipe someone’s head off or lay a trap to waste them with, and not to listen how their day went or who in pop culture is ridiculously hot and said nerd doesn’t have a chance with. I don’t want to hear about how someone is cheating, hacking, or just being a bag of douche in the game. Get over yourself, and shut up. One of the first things I’ll do with games that have voice chat embedded is turn it off immediately. I’d rather leave voice chat to external programs that can be dedicated to the sole purpose of transmitting voice instead of having to build all of that extra functionality into the game.
What things tick you off about video games? I’m sure there’s irksome moments that occur on a daily basis for any gamer, and here’s your chance to rant about it.
Continue reading » · Written on: 03-13-08 · 12 Comments »
You’re so wrong about the voice chat bit. So wrong. I love voice chat.
March 13th, 2008 at 10:33 pmAnother problem with (but sadly not always limited to) cutscenes is pausing; happens all the time, you’re in the middle of a cutscene, or looking over a map, or laying out some commands and you need to stop for a minute or two. Right Now would be good.
Quite often the only way to do this is to hit Escape and cancel whatever you were doing and to try to get the game into a mode where it lets you pause. I hate this; pause is there because everybody has a life, and hitting P or Pause/Break should *always* freeze the game, immediately, no matter what.
March 14th, 2008 at 6:58 amvoicechat is fine, if they have no option to turn it off is when it gets annoying.
Collection quests are also fine, but only if they are a side objective.
March 14th, 2008 at 6:59 amI agree. Even as a younger gamer, I find no use for voicechat. Obviously it’s necessary in certain situations (SOCOM) but otherwise I don’t need sweaty nerds telling me I suck. I know that already guys, I don’t care what you think.
March 14th, 2008 at 8:55 amSo much hate with my voice chat opinion! I think a poll is in order…
March 14th, 2008 at 9:25 amVoice chat is for fags.
March 14th, 2008 at 2:07 pmThe collect-a-thon gripe is kind of stupid because you can opt out of it. I personalty like the experience of completing a long collect-a-thon
March 14th, 2008 at 4:20 pmSo you’re calling all of Super Mario Galaxy a collection quest? By the way, if you completed that game with the minimum amount of stars, then I can guarantee you that you missed the most fun of them. All the really fun and challenging stars are after that first 60.
You do know almost every single game that has voice chat allows it to be disabled, right? I don’t know of a single game that forces voice chat.
And don’t complain about bad A.I., because it’s insanely difficult to accomplish even the extremely stupid A.I. we have in most games.
March 14th, 2008 at 5:28 pmThis list fucking sucks, you’re wrong, stupid, and you smell.
March 14th, 2008 at 6:35 pm@ssyed
Collect a thon is something you can opt out of? try playing Jet Force Gemini … an otherwise OK platformer that requires you to complete the Collect a Thon quest to actually finish the game.
Turned it off at the end when I found that out.
March 14th, 2008 at 10:17 pm[...] Read the rest of this great post here [...]
March 14th, 2008 at 10:39 pm[...] Read the rest of this great post here [...]
March 14th, 2008 at 10:44 pm