With better graphics and greater proliferation of mobile and tablet devices, more and more people are finding themselves hooked onto mobile gaming. Furthermore the plethora of free-to-play (not free) game are release almost everyday or week. Today we had our hands on Assassin’s Creed Pirate on an iPad Air.
The mobile experience redefined
Gone are the days where graphic on console is superior to the sprite graphic on mobile. Assassin’s Creed Pirates (ACP) boosts wonderful graphic comparable to that of last-gen PS3 and Xbox 360. Although PC and Console graphics are still superior, the gap is definitely narrowed. The beautiful rendered water and sunset in ACP will for a while make you lost in this new world that you can once only experience on PC and console. Of course, this is not the first game that boost wonderful graphics. Infinity blade series, FIFA and many other games boost similar quality. Console cycle is typically a few years. It will be a matter of time when mobile gaming overtake it in terms of graphical prowess. Oh and did I mention that I did not hear any noisy fan whirling typical of consoles and some PC?
No more on screen soft button
In the past, game ported from console to mobile is often perceived as inferior given that the latter almost always feature those weirdly place on screen soft button. ACP a on the other hand, while not a port over, greatly make use of the touch interface of a move device and incorporate it into the game smoothly. Drag and swipe to steer your ship, tap and hold to fire cannon of your ship. Such actions are no performed by soft button of up, down, left and right. You can even pinch and zoom to get different level of perspective when you are on board your pirate ship.
Free-to-play but not free
ACP a is free-to-play. It is a free download on the iOS AppStore. The entry barrier to playing this game is almost zero with the exception that you need to first get an smartphone or tablet. While game is free to download, there is an option to buy coins with real money to give you an head start in the game. Mobile gamers are very used to ‘free’ games, however economic 101 tells us that the developers would still have to be paid in some way. Thus far, in app purchase seems to be the best way for this developer. Of course such trends has created some rogue developers who build games aiming at maximising revenue. The true spirit of building game to entertain and challenge players may be place in the back seat in some of the free games we see today. In ACP, while in-app purchase exists, we still find the game truly enjoyable.
What’s next for PC, Console and Mobile gaming?
PC and Console games have been consolidated. Today most games are published on multiple platforms cutting across the PC and consoles realm. Of course, there exists some games like Metal Gear Solid and Destiny that are strictly for consoles. However, these day may be short lived. Coupled by the strong competition in mobile gaming, the 50-99 dollars console game that you need to purchase may not be as attractive any more compared to the zero dollar mobile game.
Here at GameTrader.SG, we would love to see console gaming evolved to a new stage. The current generation of consoles of better graphic maybe losing its luster. We need something interesting and revolutionary to get people back to console game.
Long gone are the days when video game enthusiasts were game developers. So now parents could pay their kids to be a game developer. Parents could say: “Hey son if you want to be a game developer, you don’t have to play videogames, I can just pay some money to put you in an animation school, then you’ll be a game developer!”. Son would say: “Sure, dad! Whatever you say, it’s your money. I’m top student at my high school, I can get 4.0 GPA anywhere in anything! ”
Enrolls into University of California: Los Angeles Game and Design school
Tuition fees – $30 000 USD per year (Dad: Don’t worry, that’s cheap son! I can pay for you. Just focus on your studies)
Graduated.
Employer: “Oh, wow, this kid got 4.0 GPA, he must be really good at gaming, he must know how to develop games like Hideo Kojima!
Me: Yeah right.
There is a difference between college graduates and talents…
Back then game companies and game developers used to come out, out of nowhere.
Hideo Kojima is one of those guys that came out of nowhere back in the 90s. He made these games when he was just starting out…
Before he made this
Did you know that the videogame industry today was actually an industry that’s born out of film and television? Final Fantasy and Metal Gear Solid, the two biggest name the whole world of videogaming were made by individuals who got involved in a career in filmmaking. Where else do you think the extraordinary storylines that you have enjoyed with your mouth and jaw dropped to the floor came from?
The thing is, back then, there were little or almost no undergraduate or graduate schools for animations or game design that could take students directly into the industry. But people were making videogames BETTER THAN NOW!
Hironobu Sakaguchi ( Final Fantasy Series ) dropped out from university and had a long time career as a film director at first before setting his foot into the gaming industry. Back in the 1980s he was studying electrical engineering at Yokohama University before becoming a part-time employee of SquareSoft. Now you guys tell me, if any game company today would hire a non-game non-animation school college drop out for their company? Heck no, they would probably think the guy wouldn’t even go anywhere with his ideas. Yeah right, to them.
Hideo Kojima was studying economics in university, was making 8mm films with his friends and wanted to be an artist and an illustrator at first. But he ended up working for the home computer division of Konami early in his career.
There was no American Dream in Japan, but these guys sure had a dream. We can clearly see that this unique filmmaking aspect of the Japanese videogame industry is the primary driving force behind the amazing story-telling of Japanese video games. Parasite Eve and Xenogears are also an example .
Amy Hennig, creator of Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver was also an example of a film graduate working in the videogame industry. She graduated from University of California Berkeley in English Literature (Take that game industry air heads!) and also enrolled herself into San Francisco State University Film School before getting hired by Atari to develop the game ElectroCop.
Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver 2
ElectroCop
I guess her English lit major did influence the middle age environment and situation that Raziel, our lead character for Legacy of Kain: Soul Revear, is in.
Here’s something interesting…
Me: So tell me if 4.0 GPA in film or economics have anything to do with videogames?
Employer: Errr…..aaaaa…..I’m only looking for 4.0 GPA college graduates that studied in Game Design School.
Me: Yeah right. Like you even know what you’re talking about.
Yeah, so nowadays there are numerous schools, almost every university has an animation and design course that can take people directly into the game industry.
But what happened here? What’s with all the extensive resources nowadays but these new graduate guys nowadays are only making videogames that were made by guys from before? L.M.A.O.
So here’s for you guys to figure out, if these film graduates back then were making videogames with cool storylines like Final Fantasy and Metal Gear Solid.
What kind of storylines could our straight-to-the-industry graduate boys come up with?
Resident Evil: Operation Racoon City
Heh. The storyline nowadays
You guys know what it tastes like? It tastes like this
Chrysanthemum Tea, the worst drink you could ever find in South East Asia
They sell it for cheap so that at least some kids could get a drink at a school carnival
Yuck!
Another issue that we would like to tackle is:
Recycling of Senior Game Developers
Hey, just because the guy made a few hit games or made 20 games before doesn’t mean that he can make another 5 hit games in the future? The situation’s changed by then.
That’s probably the reason why we have so many first-person shooters nowadays.
Because every game company are trying to use the same formula developed by someone else for their own success. Have these guys ever thought that the one formula might have worked exclusively for that person or that game only? It’s like trying to put a formula one racing car tyre on a family car. Just because it’s proven for racing doesn’t mean that it can fit into a family car. A formula one tyre doesn’t fit into a family car, HELLO!!!
What we need in the game industry is fresh people with fresh ideas! Screw game design school, screw resumes! Game companies should take in the best people!
It’s not that these game design school guys don’t have the talent, but most of these guys don’t have talent for game developing, they just have a lot of money to go to a game school!
So games, until we can see some talents, we are never ever ever ever, getting back together.
PS: same goes to the movie industry as well, they just want the completed scripts from mainly film school graduates even though its sucky. 10 pages of a blockbuster hit movie, or 100 pages of a crappy movie guys??
Remember those days when third-person shooters ruled the world? What happened to those days? Did the industry forget them? Did the industry left it behind because of money? This article is written for you to get an understanding of this new phenomenon.
Everywhere you see now are first-person shooters, we have Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, Call of Duty: Black Ops, Call of Duty: Black Ops 2, Halo 4, Far Cry 3, Heck, we also have games that are not supposed to be a first-person shooter crunching and squeezing into the first-person shooter genre, like Resident Evil: Umbrella Chronicles and Resident Evil: The Darkside Chronicles.
Back then every game you play has its own feel. The unique traits that makes every game, a game of its own. The reason why we all love videogaming.
Back then we had great platformers like Crash Bandicoot…
and
great action games like Zone of the Enders,
and great RPG and Beat’em up games like Xeno Saga,
The 128 bit consoles offered an array of excellent games from many different genres, despite it’s lack in graphic quality.
That’s right, DESPITE it’s lack of graphic quality. The in-game jaggies actually brought you guys more fun than the 20x anti-aliasing they have nowadays
So, what happened to those games?
Ubisoft’s managing director for Ubisoft Toronto, Jade Raymond said recently at the Game Developer’s Conference 2012, that the game industry is going towards an unhealthy commercialization of first-person shooters. The producer of the Assassin’s Creed series lunge over the industry’s favoritism over the first-person shooter genre and criticizes the abundance of the narrowed genre in the game market.
“I don’t know when we decided as an industry that in order to sell five million copies of a game you have to make a Michael Bay film. There are other options.”
She further explains,
“More and more people come to me at Ubisoft and say, ‘I love games. I came into this industry with so many ideas. But I can’t continue to make shooters over and over again. I’m not even in line with the messages.’ I have that meeting a lot these days. Yeah, it’s time to give our teenage medium a kick in the balls.” – Jade Raymond
We need to get her voice heard!
To inform you guys on how this all happened,
It all started with Resident Evil: Survivor
That’s right, that damn game that started all this crap.
Resident Evil: Survivor (1999) was one of Capcom’s conversion from a popular third-person game title to first-person one, it’s their beta-test. Capcom saw the potential of the first-person shooters market due to the global hit of first-person shooters back in the late 90s with games like Half-Life and Counter-Strike hitting homes like crazy. And because Resident Evil at that time lacks in mobility and flexibility towards the controls of the characters in the Resident Evil environment, they realized that some gamers might tend to avoid the Resident Evil series because they don’t know how to control it. So they started the test-run on the Resident Evil games to see how the response would be like if Resident Evil was made into a first person shooter. Is it more scarier? Is it more daunting? Ooo, those were the questions of the guys back in 2000. The new millennia.
Capcom Guy 1: Hey, it’s the new millennia guys! We’ve gotta start something new!
Capcom Guy 2: Like what?
Capcom Guy 1: Like Resident Evil in first person view!
Capcom Staffs: WHOAaaaaaaaa
Another game that was not so crappy, but lead the scene for the innovation of many crappy craps is Splinter Cell…
Splinter Cell’s over-the-shoulder camera, which is a mix of third person plus first-person view, was a revolutionary invention in the game industry at that time. And it was Splinter Cell’s unique trait of being a game of its own, marking a new revolution in game-making in 2002. However, many game producers later started mass-producing and mass marketing their games using the same formula for almost every game that they released later in the industry!
And now it’s like every game company is telling their developers and designers, which are most probably filled with university graduates by now that are famous for their ‘do as told’ traits , to “Do over-the-shoulder camera for our games! Like Splinter Cell! A.S.A.P.!.” And these robotic non-genuine product of university just nod their heads “Yes, Sir!” and started munching their way through the development of these games like how they revise for their exams that’s filled with recycled information.
Talk about “Made in University”!
Back in the 90s and early 2000s, every game has its own feel. Even the first-person shooters.
Rainbow Six 3: Raven Shield
Counter-Strike
Now try to match that with the first-person these nowadays
Crysis
Far Cry
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare
Can somebody tell me if these three are actually the same game just with a different storyline?
Mostly first-person shooters?? This is Crazy!! They make first-person shooters more than what people even demand for. It just shows that the industry is only looking to make money out of something. And what’s with the easy one-straight road gameplay for the first-person shooters nowadays? Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 was a disappointment, they made the game terribly easy so that they could get more audience in the game (mainly super young audiences and older adults) to play the game. It’s just like how a radio station would give out TERRIBLY easy questions like, “How much is 1 + 1 ? ” Just to get a lot of listeners to call in, so that they will SOUND more hype. And sometimes when you listen to these radio stations, How the heck did everyone win a prize? That’s like cheating their way.
Here’s a good word from our guy from youtube:
“I feel like we’re in the era of video games where everyone’s continuously producing remakes of the same game. I’m hoping that we can get more companies out there that are willing to break that mold and bring something revolutionary because all we’re getting nowadays is just another Mario, or Zelda, or Call of duty, Halo or Uncharted 🙁 ” – Crystalshine777
Let the users be heard!!!
So what happened here?
What happened is that….every game company is using the same algorithm to develop new games. Come on, be original !
The videogame industry’s creativity have somehow came onto a halt because of this move by the game industry.
What we need is passionate game industry experts, not people with degrees, not moneyheads, but people with the creativity and the extraordinary talent to create and innovate great videogames for the future.