I’ve been seeing a lot of people online saying games are very bad at storytelling because your playing it while learning the lore, I think that’s BS but I wanted to see if gamers such as yourselves agree or disagree

  • Pegussu@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Games aren’t inherently bad at storytelling, it just has to be handled differently than a movie or show. You couldn’t make a movie like Outer Wilds or a TV show like The Stanley Parable.

    Even something like The Last of Us which has sometimes been derided as a “movie game” takes advantage of the medium by letting you naturally build a relationship with Ellie and explore the setting. You can see that it the show; as good as it is, Ellie and Joel’s relationship progression is a little more abrupt simply because it can’t be done as slowly and thoroughly as the game can.

    • zerominusfiftyplus@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      it can’t be done as slowly and thoroughly as the game can

      What? Bullshit. What garbage shows are you watching where plot and characterization can’t be slowly developed? Maybe stop watching bad movies and TV.

      Meanwhile, what are you doing in the game? Pointless busywork to connect one part of the story to another. That’s it. You’re not doing anything but unlocking the next cutscene by a bunch of poorly done gameplay.

      I cannot understand how we have gotten to this point. I guess the whole forced change in gaming in the late 90s with trash like Metal Gear Solid has screwed over the entire industry so bad we can’t even understand what a real game is supposed to be any more.

    • Shylteryne@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      “Or a TV show like Stanley Parable”

      there is a “Stanley Parable” show on apple TV. It’s called Severance

      • Xreshiss@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        Having watched Severance, I’d say the two have just about nothing in common until maybe the last two episodes.

        I would not recommend Severance based on someone’s like for Stanley Parable.

  • corrineko@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Idk to me it’s kind of like saying “TV series’ aren’t good at storytelling” because it really depends on what game you’re playing. I’ve played games that I think have fantastic storytelling that ties the whole experience together and I’ve also played games whose bad storytelling ruined the gameplay. On average, I think most games have at least decent storytelling, but I think it’s improved a lot with newer titles.

  • PhanThief95@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    No, they’re not. Hell, I’ve played games that have better stories than many movies & TV shows.

  • PatternActual7535@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I think the answer of this is just “It Depends”

    Some Games are very good at story telling and making a compellint narrative

    Others are genuinely awful at ir

    But thata just like any piece of consumable media, not all of it is good

  • IrrelevantPuppy@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Games can get away with bad stories because sometimes it’s more about the gameplay. But games in no way inherently have bad storytelling.

  • Xenozip3371Alpha@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I disagree completely, games can be far better at storytelling since their story doesn’t have to be squeezed into 1 and a half to 3 hours, and being the player yourself you’re far more engaged with the plot.

  • themagicbong@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Metal gear solid has to be one of the craziest, most convoluted stories ever and I was 100% down for every moment of that crazy shit. Mgs4 had me crying seeing old snake in the cemetery, knowing full well he was gonna die soon. I can’t remember who but think it was Otacon that offered him a cig at the end and he’s like “nah, those things will kill you.”. Yeah it was Otacon. Had to Google it. Also who can forget the cow things?

    I wouldn’t remember this shit all these years later if the storytelling was whack.

  • Ratnix@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I personally think they are. But that’s coming from someone who reads books more than i have time to play video games.

    At best, stories in video games are very short stories. If you just write down the story, it’s not going to take you even an hour to read the whole thing. This doesn’t leave you any time to tell a really good story. Games rely on the player to make up the difference in the storytelling through their actions.

    Some games do better than others, but they’re never going to tell a story as well as an actual novel would be able to tell that same story.

  • Choice_Produce1079@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    It’s definitely like that with current day games, barring a special few obviously. I hate that gamers can’t accept when games have dogshit stories but then claim it’s skyrimesque( cough elden ring is complete dog shit story cough)

  • punky100@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    No, people are bad at paying attention. They get all wrapped up in the game, what comes next, what do I do now, etc, that they don’t stop and listen. They just have to go go go, and then complain that they don’t understand the story. Maybe take time and slow play instead of trying to beat everyone to the end. It’s more fun that way.

  • zerominusfiftyplus@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I don’t play games that try to force a huge narrative on you. Those aren’t games, they’re things created by people who were not good enough to get their story told in traditional media and not good enough to flesh out a decent game in and of itself.

    Story in a game is like a story in a porn movie. It’s expected to be there, but it’s not that important.

    - John Carmack

    In other words, set up the setting of the game and then for the most part, stop telling your story and let the game speak for itself. What a concept.