LP
Premium Member
I feel like I'm the ONLY ONE who enjoyed Mass Effect 1.
Including the Mako
Not at all; I love both ME's.
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I feel like I'm the ONLY ONE who enjoyed Mass Effect 1.
Including the Mako
What I mean by typical tropes of bad sci-fi... I mean bullshit mythos. Bad sci-fi tends to have overly complicated plots, with political twist after political twist that simply don't make sense. And in order to shoehorn those "twists" in, they make characters do unrealistic or uncharacteristic actions. The best sci-fi stories actually have very simple plots... Battlestar Galactica, very simple. Stargate Atlantis, very simple. The original Star Wars trilogy, very simple.Man do I agree with you about ME1, what an atrociously boring and ugly game. But ME2 is completely different, impressively streamlined, and excellently written. It also has probably one of the greatest final closing "missions" I have seen in a game in ages. If only they could have taken the brilliance of that mission and stretched it throughout the majority of the game, it would have been perfection.
Either way, ME1 is worth suffering through to get to ME2. ME3 better live up to ME2's brilliance though.
Nah. I loved mass effect from the first. Going back to create my infiltrator's play through though the combat was definitely better in mass effect 2. In that regard number one felt like a slog. But you can't beat the original for an introduction to the mass effect universe. For that matter... I don't even know if you talk to any Hanar in mass effect 2.I feel like I'm the ONLY ONE who enjoyed Mass Effect 1.
Including the Mako
Some of us like things complicated. Looking at the real world from current events to human history, nothing is ever simple. While simple parables of good and evil make nice fables, sometimes you want something to sink your intellectual teeth into. For that matter, you shouldn't confuse mythos with plot. Bladerunner had a really simple plot, but between new technologies, future wars, a replicant uprising and the explanation of the societal structure a complicated enough mythos to fill up a series of novels.What I mean by typical tropes of bad sci-fi... I mean bullshit mythos. Bad sci-fi tends to have overly complicated plots, with political twist after political twist that simply don't make sense..
Yeah, I understand that too. That is also improved greatly in ME2, but of course it's still there. It is hard to find good writing anywhere, and nearly impossible to find good writing in the brutal combination of sci-fi and action/shooter video game. It's the kiss of death.What I mean by typical tropes of bad sci-fi... I mean bullshit mythos. Bad sci-fi tends to have overly complicated plots, with political twist after political twist that simply don't make sense. And in order to shoehorn those "twists" in, they make characters do unrealistic or uncharacteristic actions. The best sci-fi stories actually have very simple plots... Battlestar Galactica, very simple. Stargate Atlantis, very simple. The original Star Wars trilogy, very simple.
I think you misunderstand. I LOVE intellectual plots; in fact most of my friends think I'm a little too stuck up about senseless movies without them (such as the shit Expendables or Inglorius Basterds). The problem is that complicated =/= intellectual. More often than not, complicated is at the EXPENSE of intellect; they are artificially made complicated through the stupid actions of characters. Characters that don't act human, don't follow their "character", or straight up have ambiguous motives that make little to no sense. This is the problem with most sci-fi.Some of us like things complicated. Looking at the real world from current events to human history, nothing is ever simple. While simple parables of good and evil make nice fables, sometimes you want something to sink your intellectual teeth into. For that matter, you shouldn't confuse mythos with plot. Bladerunner had a really simple plot, but between new technologies, future wars, a replicant uprising and the explanation of the societal structure a complicated enough mythos to fill up a series of novels.