Beat Writer Posts: 151 Joined: 15 Feb 2008 | |
Paperboy Posts: 15 Joined: 4 Dec 2007 | I don't know why anyone would want to do this. It actually sounds kind of sad. Maybe, after hours of abusing themselves to explicit Internet imagery in their mom's basement, they no longer have the manual dexterity necessary to actually play a game. Is this not a reasonable explanation? I just want to point out how disappointed I am that G-Surfing stands for Game-Surfing. I thought I was going to read a post about a hot new trend called Gangsta'-Surfing. Now that's a trend I'm willing to get behind. |
On the Record Posts: 6226 Joined: 10 Mar 2008 | For some reason, I watched almost all of the levels of Portal with someone showing how to complete them. I don't know why I did it considering I don't even have the game. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3664 Joined: 21 Jan 2008 | Well, the only time I watch videos of people playing video games are reviews, or walkthroughs. But, meh, some people might want to get a sense of the game before buying. Though, I'm not sure why someone would watch the whole thing. |
BANNED Posts: 13 Joined: 6 Apr 2007 | Because if the game's a bunch of memorization-heavy lameness, it's closely related to movies anyway. That is, you're not playing with your reflexes anymore, you're just going through the motions. Ninja Gaiden, all of them, are good examples of this. Spend time dealing with that bird of the avian family Pitus Bullshitae Cocksuckus, or spend less time just watching someone else do it perfectly. Basically, any time a developer gets it into their head that they're making a cinematic experience, you're going to end up with something that's a billion times more fun to watch than it is to play. Doesn't matter if it's Another World/Out of this World, or PoP: Sands of Time. Alternately, the clips are useful if the game is dependent on some arbitrary, yet repetitive trick. See also: Ninja Gaiden. Or God Hand. Or Viewtiful Joe. Also, bonus points for trying to blow the matter out of proportion with the time estimate. No, people generally don't sit through 6 hours of gameplay in movie form. Good thing that most movies never reach longer than 2, and are easy to find in segmented form. See, the point is to watch someone do it perfectly, or at least well, which generally takes less time than it would for you to practice it on your own. User was banned for: Poll: The word Gay as a pejorative. (Permanent) |
Muckraker Posts: 298 Joined: 7 Dec 2007 | there are usually 4 or so main reasons people watch game walkthrus. 1) they played it once before and they simply want to see how some one else played it. 2) they want the back story with out the game. 3) the Challenge breakers. 4) i finished path a, i don't feel like playing the game again to see path b c and d... the few game movies i have watched all fall into those catagories. and no, you will never remove the gamer from the game, nor will this ever hurt video game or console sales. players will always want to interact with the game, control the charicters and feel like they are doing something. |
On the Record Posts: 6480 Joined: 24 Apr 2008 |
no, i'm still dextrous enough to play games even after about 4 hours of that. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 771 Joined: 7 Jan 2008 | Hm, well... First off, i would not see it if the ENTIRETY of the gameplay is featured in it. Given there are only parts recorded that are vital for the Story (Cutscenes, Bossfights, Big Setpieces, In-Game Conversations, Level Transitions), i'd probably watch it if i do not like the Gameplay, but the Story and Setting...or if i am too lazy to play an Adventure. I actually tried one time to create a consistent comicbook out of Max Payne by taking the "Cutscene Images" (pretty easy to extract) and capture vital bits of the In-Game Cutscenes and the Gameplay using the developer mode where you can change the camera perspective. Needless to say, the project died on my lazyness and my inability to recreate the look of the comic images for the In-Game Scenes with Photoshop. (P.S. I guess i would had more fun just "watching" Killer 7) |
Infamous Scribbler Posts: 672 Joined: 8 Nov 2007 | When watching the game being played is actually funnier than playing it yourself. I Wanna Be The Guy anyone? I've seen two full playtroughs of that and enjoyed them immensely but do not feel the need to actually play it myself. Thinking of it, I might look up a playthrough of the DMC's, I liked the visual style but didn't enjoy the gameplay much. |
Paperboy Posts: 15 Joined: 4 Dec 2007 |
You must stretch beforehand. Your arms, I mean. |
Muckraker Posts: 272 Joined: 6 Mar 2008 | Only for games on systems I don't have. Other than that I like watching speed runs. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3731 Joined: 8 May 2008 | Oh god, this is the last thing I need. My missus along with alot of others is one of those people who yells at the tv constantly, you know the type, in horror movies "HES RIGHT BEHIND YOU" (yet for some reason it wasn't funny when I did it during Brokeback Mountian...) plus she is a back seat gamer "turn left, click on that, shoot him" Now we are going to have to put up with them trying to tell the game movie what to do... |
Paperboy Posts: 11 Joined: 8 May 2008 | I watched an MGS Portable Ops walkthrough because I'm an avid MGS fan but will never ever buy a PSP. I just wanted to see the story properly. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3731 Joined: 8 May 2008 | Okay this is a little different to what you are probably talking about but I just stumbled upon World of Warcraft Tales of the Past. Its just a whole movie but using WoW chars and in game graphics and really, I have to say im impressed. Its obviously fan made but has a (soo far from what ive seen) decent storyline, voices, subs and its actually far more interesting to me then anything ive seen at the cinema latly. |
Copy Clerk Posts: 70 Joined: 26 Mar 2008 |
That's called machinima e.g Red Vs. Blue. It's when someone uses an existing engine to make something, there's LOADS of WoW machinima like The Grind, Time Gnomes etc they're all great Oh and ToTP was made on my old server, Dunemaul. I know the cousin of the dude he made it and he's the inspiration for my 18month addiction to WoW :P |
BANNED Posts: 13 Joined: 6 Apr 2007 |
In a roundabout way, this is another interesting aspect of watching videogame replays: learning by example. By watching without playing, you can often notice things you might not have time to notice when part of your concentration is actually being spent on dealing with all the crap a game is throwing at you. If the game is particularly hectic, you're probably just trying to get by when you're playing. But if you watch another person play a difficult section/game, you can go "oh, i didn't really realize that before" and adjust your own playthrough based off what you noticed while watching. See: Ninja Fucking Gaiden, or any number of games in the shoot 'em up genre. User was banned for: Poll: The word Gay as a pejorative. (Permanent) |
Press Junketeer Posts: 429 Joined: 17 Oct 2007 | G-Surfing is...eh. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 979 Joined: 22 Mar 2008 | I watch speedruns before getting the game to get ideas. Then I almost always buy them. |
Muckraker Posts: 346 Joined: 21 Nov 2007 | I'll admit that I've watched a few speed-runs as well, only because I questioned the validity of the times they claimed, like someone playing through the entirety of Half-Life in under 30 minutes. Otherwise I've never seen a point to G-surfing. The main component of a games enjoyment comes from actually playing the game yourself and experiencing the story from your own point of view. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2487 Joined: 29 Nov 2007 | I'll watch the first couple of levels of a game before I buy it if I want to know if the plot or writing is any good. This guy is probably the best one on the web right now: |
|
|
Not registered? Sign up for a free account! |
ok, I've seen and heard about this for a while. G(ame)-surfing.
if you don't know what this is, basically people go and watch video walkthroughs for games like a movie rather than actually going and buying the game. Some people have actually gone far enough to make videos that play like movies, complete with cutscenes (go to youtube and look up ninja gaiden movie).
I can understand seeing a couple of clips to see if the in-game graphics are really as sharp and stunning as depicted in trailer, but can people really sit there and watch 6-10+ hours of gameplay? If you're watching some person playing through levels, do you still get any of the entertainment value?
If it gets big enough, could it affect sales of games/consoles?
Is this the latest thing for the financially strapped gamer?
Won't this violate some copywrite law somewhere?
Will this really turn into a big trend?
Does anyone here do this?