Thursday 8 May 2014

How Excited Do We Get For New Games?

With the release date for Watchdogs 19 days away, I am slowly getting excited about immersing myself into a single player campaign once again. Apart from GTA 5 and The Last Of Us, I don't think I have looked forward to a game release for quite a while.


With franchises releasing new games annually now, do we still get that same excitement we used to for new games? Don't get me wrong, I love Assassins Creed, FIFA, COD and Battlefield (I like both! Get on that fan boys) but knowing a new instalment is coming once a year kills my buzz for them a bit.


World record for the longest cuddle


I remember having to scan through official magazines (before YouTube kids) for the next big thing. I camped out on 15th November 2000 after school for three hours waiting for my friends dad so we could buy WWF No Mercy. Donkey Kong 64 was also huge for us too, maybe just for the opening rap scene!. We would plan out months in advance exactly how we would play the game and read articles about them over and over again.


I think with the Internet being so big now, you can feel like you have played half the game before you actually own it because of the hours of game play at our disposal, we could even go as far as saying we don't actually have to play the game because websites can tell us an entire plot line the day of release. Gone are the days we went to school excited about sharing what happened last night in our own little world.


Online multiplayer also plays a massive part too. There is a massive market for them now that getting online is so easy, just look at the success of first person shooters and MMORPG's. It is so much easier to turn on your console/PC and and jump straight into the action rather than sit through the cinematic scenes of a single player campaign (Looking at you here Metal Gear Solid).





I know companies must spend hundreds of thousands on advertising now, creating snap shots to tease us about their upcoming IP but even that can spoil it (The Point explains this brilliantly). Do we want to know too much now before we buy? Maybe the mystery that used to surround a game gave me that buzz feeling I am now missing.


What games are you looking forward to? What memories do you have of buying games?


Feel free to comment below.

@Joe_Copson

Joe Copson - Google+

Wednesday 7 May 2014

Are video games too competitive?


The thoughts and ideas of this subject have been floating around in my mind for a few months now, mainly after finishing up on my console for the night in that 20-30 minutes of peace you get in bed before falling asleep.


Do we take gaming now too seriously? Has it got the point where we don’t play games now for the enjoyment but play because we want to be better than someone else?


My earliest memory I think is playing FIFA International Soccer on the Sega mega drive, Janco Tianno and Matt Webster banging them in for the EA all-stars against a lowly Qatar because you wanted to win 8-0. If I wind forward to 1998 when FIFA 99 was released, an old friend and I spent a whole day of our summer holidays using the instant replay function as we were adamant Bergkamp was struck by lightning.

Yey, synchronised goal celebration!

The point I want to make is that playing these games was great fun and I didn’t really care about the score when playing against a friend. We were far more amused by the fact that if you put in a horror tackle on FIFA International Soccer you could spend the next five minutes running away from the ref to avoid a yellow card. Win or lose we enjoyed it.


Fast forward 21 years to FIFA 14 and something has changed, yes I know I have grown up and it isn’t just about the taking part (sorry kids!), but do I get that same enjoyment? Probably not….unless I win. For example, playing online seasons I was on a really stinky 6 match losing streak (this is where I had my light bulb moment), Do I play again because I want to? Or because I want/need to win? The last thing I wanted to do was to play another 15 minutes and get endlessly frustrated and annoyed when I concede an 89th minute goal, followed by opposing player spending the next ten minutes celebrating and watching the replay from every possible angle!

'Ssshhhh, If I am quiet no one will notice me at the back post'

Call of Duty is another fine example, I have recently stopped playing multiplayer because I just stopped having fun. I know what you’re thinking and yes I am your average Joe type of player, I have good games and bad games. Here is that light bulb moment again though, I started to worry about my K/D ratio rather than play and enjoy the game itself.






I am not trying to say let us all boycott multiplayer, not at all. I still die in the opening seconds in Team Death Match and still concede 90th minute goals on FIFA. I just want you all to strip back all of the stats and trophies and remember why you put that game in your console in the first place. Enjoy!