I know I remember seeing some people talk about how nice some of the environments in Hitman were, and that they’d just walk around as a tourist from time to time, treating it like a walking simulator/virtual tourism thing instead of the stealth assassination game it is. Curious about other things like that, where you play a game totally differently than it was meant to be played.

  • takeda@lemm.ee
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    20 hours ago

    Then you purchased a wrong game and should just play solitaire.

    Witcher 3 is absolutely great, but if you just go through only the main quest, won’t explore the world and won’t do side quests then I can see you ending up disappointed.

    What I like is that side quests can impact the main quest and even the ending.

    • who@feddit.org
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      17 hours ago

      Then you purchased a wrong game

      Perhaps.

      But you’ve made a lot of assumptions in your comment, and you’re mistaken about most of them.

      I played the side quests. Many came with a good backstory, but that is not gameplay. Nearly all were copy/paste instances from a small pool of tedious tasks. There were a few memorable exceptions, but very few.

      I explored the world, as much as one can “explore” something that is fully labeled with point-of-interest markers. They lead the player to a repetitive handful of uninspired encounters, cloned over and over again.

      It has plenty of other flaws as well. If you loved it, then I’m happy for you, but I found the gameplay boring.

      The strengths I found in The Witcher 3 were its story, lore, characters, and Gwent. Not its gameplay.

      Meanwhile, Gwent is a surprisingly well-designed strategy game. So much so that it ended up spun off into a stand-alone version (although I don’t know how good the spinoff is).

      To each their own, I suppose.