One flaw in the game worth mentioning that Yahtzee didn't get to is that it seems like no matter how you play the ethics of it, the overall game flow is identical. So rather than each choice being a fork in the plot, each choice is merely a coin toss along an entirely linear plot.
Sure, if you're a good guy the crowds take photos and if you're a bad guy the crowds throw rocks. But beyond that, there's not a lot of change in the outcome. I expect the end sequence of the game will be a little different, but playing through it again isn't all that new an experience.
Comment spammers should know all links have "nofollow" forcibly added to them - so you aren't getting any PageRank bump from spamming my blog. You're just annoying me.
One flaw in the game worth mentioning that Yahtzee didn't get to is that it seems like no matter how you play the ethics of it, the overall game flow is identical. So rather than each choice being a fork in the plot, each choice is merely a coin toss along an entirely linear plot.
ReplyDeleteSure, if you're a good guy the crowds take photos and if you're a bad guy the crowds throw rocks. But beyond that, there's not a lot of change in the outcome. I expect the end sequence of the game will be a little different, but playing through it again isn't all that new an experience.