Something went wrong. Try again later

Giant Bomb News

122 Comments

Giant Bomb's 2012 Game of the Year Awards: Day Four

In today's penultimate array of awards, downloadable games TAKE OVER THE WORLD while big ol' triple-A retail games are saaaaaaad.

Welcome to the quick-and-filthy look at today's awards categories. Sure, we spent time writing that text below, but it's really only here for people who don't have the time or energy to listen to our deliberation podcast or watch the video recap for today's categories. That's not you, is it? OK, go check that stuff out and then swing back by over here if you're looking for a little further explanation about our categories and winners. Deal?

WarioWare Spirit Award

Frobisher Says!

No Caption Provided

The WarioWare Spirit Award goes to the game that most embodies the things that make WarioWare great: Frantic action, objectives that change so fast that part of the game is figuring out what the hell you're even looking at, and a certain awkward sense of charm. In a year with a WarioWare release, this category would be redundant. But these days (and with no proper WarioWare sequel on the horizon), you're going to have to dig around for games that follow in the fat man's garlic-soaked footsteps. Surprisingly, there were numerous games to choose from.

But no one else captures the true spirit of WarioWare better than Honeyslug's Frobisher Says!, which was launched as a free downloadable game back in October, with some additional paid DLC releasing to expand the game with more microgames. Frobisher meets the WarioWare standard in a few different ways, first by delivering on that frantic gameplay that requires you to be fast on your feet and then by packing in the work of numerous artists who hadn't worked on games before, which lends the proceedings a unique look. But it also pulls off the neat trick that many of the WarioWare games also accomplish: it uses the available hardware in a lot of interesting ways. In the Vita, Frobisher Says! gets to play around on a platform so packed with weird, often-clumsy control options that it can't help but make you respect all that stuff. One game exclusively uses the back touch to move. Another uses the camera to detect if you're smiling or not, with the goal being to smile only at the pretty ladies. It's amazing. And most of it is free, which is perhaps the craziest part of all. If you have a Vita, stop screwing around and go download Frobisher Says! immediately.

No Caption Provided

Runners-Up: Rhythm Heaven Fever, McPixel

Best Download Game That Makes Us Want to Eliminate Award Categories for Download Games

The Walking Dead

Don't forget about Gomez!
Don't forget about Gomez!

The winds of video game distribution are changing--have been changing for several years, in fact--and we're fairly certain (and if nothing else, hopeful) that with the next generation of consoles, the phrase "downloadable game" will give way to a more appropriate term like, say, "game." The games you obtain through your Internet pipe have become every bit as ambitious, mechanically sound, and narratively engaging as the ones that come in a box. Actually, in many cases, the downloadables surpass the retail games in all of those categories.

No download game resonated more this year than The Walking Dead, which told a damn good story, emphasized meaningful player agency, and hewed to the sort of piecemeal episodic release schedule that got people talking around the water cooler in a way they haven't for a long time. But truly this was the year when we repeatedly took a pause, looked at all the stuff we'd been playing, and were repeatedly shocked and delighted at just how many of our favorites were smaller games in the 10 to 15 dollar range. Mark of the Ninja, with its impeccable stealth-puzzle mechanics, and the lovely retro aesthetic and mind-bending cryptography of Fez were among the best games of the year, nevermind what they cost or how you obtained them.

But the list hardly stops there. Let this category stand as a tribute to all the excellent games that materialized on our PCs and consoles out of thin air this year, including Journey, Hotline Miami, FTL, Rock Band Blitz, Spelunky, Trials Evolution, Dyad, Sound Shapes, Dust: An Elysian Tail, McPixel, and too many others to list here. If this is the caliber of games that results from the modest budgets and ease of release afforded by digital distribution, the future is looking bright indeed.

No Caption Provided

Runners-up: Mark of the Ninja, Fez

Best Multiplayer

Need for Speed: Most Wanted

No Caption Provided

Criterion is the studio responsible for some of the most influential multiplayer innovations of this generation. The "Autolog" feature that worked its way into the team's previous Need for Speed game is now everywhere, from shooters to open-world crime simulators. But the crew at Criterion isn't solely focused on reinventing the leaderboard. Need for Speed: Most Wanted is a prime example of how to find ways to play multiplayer that feel inclusive, rather than just developing something that can only be enjoyed if you're willing to devote every last second of your free time to staying good at something.

Most Wanted's multiplayer is competitive even when it's cooperative. You're up against the other racers in your game whether you're jetting over to the next starting point or working together to all reach a specific rooftop. It also makes a lot of exciting moves in the way it handles its racing by eliminating boring old starting grids in favor of something a little wilder... a little meaner. But at the end of the day, it's still about learning how the cars handle and knowing how to bash another racer off the road, things that have a decidedly lower learning curve than most other multiplayer games out there. Tack on a fun leveling system that ties together your progress across all modes and all versions of the game to give you a Call of Duty-like perk system for your cars, and you've got enough little hooks to keep you interested for a good long time.

Now if they could just make it easier to mute all the chatty Russians with always-on microphones in the PC version...

No Caption Provided

Runners-Up: Spaceteam, Journey

Best Story

The Walking Dead

No Caption Provided

There are two stories playing out in The Walking Dead: the one you're creating and the one authored by the creators at Telltale Games. The tension between the two reveals the subtle brilliance of The Walking Dead. In terms of the broader story beats, you ultimately have little control over what happens in The Walking Dead, but your influence over who lives, who dies, and how you choose to interact with characters in the most bizarre and upsetting of situations is profound. Though the overall story head to the same point for everyone, how you get there and who you leave behind will be very different, and results in a game pulling off authentic player choice in a way we haven't seen before. Who could have predicted that in the year that gave us Mass Effect 3?

What's remarkable is how little desire you feel to see how else the story could have played out. Even though Telltale Games built in a "rewind" function for that specific purpose, there was no motivation to use it. Your story was the story, and Telltale Games managed to make that stick for five episodes. Still, since you knew the story could play out differently, the first conversation after an episode was "what'd you do when [insert horrible choice]?" The Walking Dead inspired endless discussions about what does and doesn't make sense in most dire of circumstances.

Player choice aside, The Walking Dead is just a damn good story. You come to know the characters on a very personal level, and while the armchair designer in us may realize Clementine is a bit of a crutch for the writers to pull at our heart strings, it makes your relationship with her no less important. Protecting her become vital to survival in The Walking Dead's dreary new world. If we can't raise children and impart our values onto them, what's the point of surviving? By the end of The Walking Dead, that question becomes paramount, and sets up a tear-jerker of a conversation. And this is all without complimenting the game's overlooked but no less impressive portrayal of an African-American lead character, complimented by a child. How many games would even try that, let alone pull it off?

No Caption Provided

Runners-up: Dust: An Elysian Tail, Papo & Yo

Most Disappointing Game

Assassin's Creed III

No Caption Provided

First off, let's be clear that, for something to be disappointing, there had to have been expectations of something great, and it hadn't been that long ago that greatness visited the house of Assassin's Creed. Last year's Revelations may have felt rote and unnecessary, dragging out the Ezio story longer than it needed while simultaneously robbing him of his youth, but 2010's Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood was this series at its best, and all signs leading up to the release of Assassin's Creed III seemed incredibly promising.

The exciting and unknown setting of the American Revolution seemed awash in possibility, as did the new protagonist, a half-British/half-Native American character whose lineage had the potential to make him more invested in the coming conflict than his predecessors. New settings and a new hero meant new activities, and what we had seen of the huge naval battles and of Connor traipsing through the treetops hunting game looked good, or at least, looked like a distinct change of pace. On the other side of the Animus, there was also the promise of finally wrapping up Desmond's story, learning the truth about the First Civilization, and bring a stop to the apocalyptic event that all of this has--apparently--been leading up to.

What we got wasn't bad, per se, at least not across the board, but it was hard not to be disappointed. Connor's righteous naïveté paled in comparison to the cocky self-assuredness of Ezio. The lack of verticality provided by the dirt streets of Boston and the other young cities of Colonial America was a trade-off for the tree-filled wilderness that linked them together, but there simply wasn't much to do in that wilderness, and it forfeited the kind of urban exploration that had come to define much of the series. While many of the mysteries surrounding the First Civilization and Desmond's connection to it get resolved, the final resolution was unsatisfying and abrupt. All of these weaknesses are compounded by the fact that, for all of the side-missions you can get up to, the game fails to wrap them up into an interesting, cohesive whole, which is ultimately what makes Assassin's Creed III our most disappointing game of the year.

No Caption Provided

Runners-up: Mass Effect 3, Resident Evil 6

122 Comments

Avatar image for friskyheadcrab
FriskyHeadCrab

43

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By FriskyHeadCrab

@Hawkerace said:

So much Walking dead, bleh I thought it was the disappointment of the year, I bought into everyone's hype and was bored the entirety of it.

Then you have no soul. Or perhaps you don't understand human emotions? Not sure which it is, but clearly there is a lump of coal where your heart should be.

Avatar image for kainser
Kainser

3

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Kainser

"meaningful player agency"? The game was OK and all, but really.

Avatar image for aaron_g
Aaron_G

1694

Forum Posts

3259

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 8

User Lists: 6

Edited By Aaron_G

Not surprised to see AC: III make "Most Disappointing Game". For 2012, this was the game I was looking forward to most. However, once I began playing it I realized this wasn't going to be what I wanted it to be. It was choppy, I didn't feel that Connor was a great protagonist, and overall it just didn't feel like Assassin's Creed....

Avatar image for beb
Beb

298

Forum Posts

445

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 5

User Lists: 0

Edited By Beb

I found ME3 to be way, way more disappointing than AC3, but I can see the argument for having it the other way around. It's a pretty subjective category.

If I wasn't such a big Mass Effect fan going in, I wouldn't have cared as much about the missteps in ME3. I was probably disappointed more often by AC3 but in smaller doses. Considering only the good parts of both games, I had more fun with ME3, no question.

Avatar image for lelcar
Lelcar

1189

Forum Posts

14

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 25

Edited By Lelcar

I loved the discussion for todays awards, they were fantastic and polarizing. Even though I never really agree fully with anyone I still love hearing their opinions. But yeah, like most of you, the Most Disappointing deliberations kinda rubbed me the wrong way.

Avatar image for dr_mantas
dr_mantas

2557

Forum Posts

92

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By dr_mantas

@forkboy said:

@dr_mantas said:

I can't even believe Mass Effect 3 is a runner up for most disappointing.

Actually, I can, but I totally disagree.

I think ME3 would be in my top 3 most disappointing games for 2012, but that says more about the high expectations I had going in. The game is perfectly fine, but the story doesn't really end in satisfying way, for me at least. And because of how attached I was to the characters & the universe as a whole, ending on a damp squib is disappointing.

Plus something like Resi 6 or Halo 4 weren't games I had any expectations for, so they couldn't disappoint.

The thing is, I don't feel this should be most disappointing ending. The game is fucking solid until pretty much the very end (if I had to pinpoint it, the moment it falls apart is anything after the platform rises to lift Shepard up). I had high expectations, but they were generally met by the game.

Now the problem I had with the ending, is that I didn't want to have such finality to the ending. Sure, they changed the relays exploding in the Extended Cut, but it's still pretty much final. I liked the universe, and I didn't want it to change so drastically.

People would consider it childish, etc., but I don't feel games should be as finalistic as they are. Movies, tv shows have to have a specific ending, because of the cast getting old, the cost, etc, a plethora of different reasons. But games don't have that problem. It can be stories upon stories upon stories. Why do games have to be preset trilogies? You can change the gameplay up, you can have your triumphant ending, but don't make it so final.

If the ending had to be final, I don't really care how they accomplish it. The ending we get is as good as any other. Be it dark energy, space ghosts or some other supposedly different reason for the ending, it's still the same.

The only ending I would have liked better, is one with more possibilities for continuity.

The game before the end is the best thing I played all year. Fucking Mordin, right there, singing at the end. Damn.

Avatar image for screamingghost
ScreamingGhost

237

Forum Posts

20

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By ScreamingGhost

@Kingpk: I don't feel it was wasted but I agree that the side stuff felt like fluff. I wanted more story about Connor and his relationships (His mother, father, and Achilles) instead we got brief moments that suggested more. I do agree with the ending though but it wasn't unexpected and I've come to the point where I no longer care about the present day story line. Its something that while crucial feels unneeded; it serves only as a frame for the story at this point. Even with its flaws I enjoyed playing it.

Avatar image for 4outof5
4outof5

30

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By 4outof5

Brad ruined GOTY last year and he is doing it again this year. Someone take away this man's writing tools before he destroys this site.

Avatar image for screamingghost
ScreamingGhost

237

Forum Posts

20

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By ScreamingGhost

AC3 as most disappointing eh? While I was disappointed by the games resolution I would have to give ME3 my most disappointing. The game felt rushed with missing holes in the plot with an ending that still leaves a sour taste in my mouth. Still a great end with some major character high points and real emotional pull but looking back on the experience ME3 hasn't stood the test of time.

Avatar image for veektarius
veektarius

6420

Forum Posts

45

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 11

User Lists: 1

Edited By veektarius

People here are expressing surprise that ME3 wasn't the most disappointing game, but I'm more surprised that it wasn't Resident Evil 6. I know the Bomb crew aren't the biggest Resident Evil fans on the block... and I guess Jeff is more in my camp of hating it altogether, but both Mass Effect 3 and AC are thriving franchises with some very real bright spots to look forward to with those franchises' futures. Perhaps they'll make good on them and perhaps not, but RE6 was dealing with a franchise that was in its renaissance, following on a pretty well-accepted predecessor, and they just loathed it across the bored. Isn't that the definition of disappointing?

Avatar image for cloudenvy
Cloudenvy

5896

Forum Posts

8

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By Cloudenvy

@Phatmac: Better not be!

Avatar image for sethphotopoulos
SethPhotopoulos

5777

Forum Posts

3465

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 8

Edited By SethPhotopoulos

I almost completely disagree with their most disappointing category. RE6 would've been mine since I expected something that was at least dumb fun but instead was terrible.

I think I'm just good at tempering my expectations. ME3 and AC 3 both exceeded my expectations. After ME2 I thought that there was no way they could satisfyingly end the trilogy and knew that no matter what there would be backlash to whatever they did. I still looked forward to it, all I really wanted was more character interaction and I got that even from the characters I didn't expect it from. I thought the multiplayer would be poor or forgettable and it was really fun, I still play it. I was wary of the new characters but most of them were fine. It had some of the best moments in the series too.

For AC3 I just wanted something better than Revelations (which I still enjoyed.) I also avoided a lot of AC3 stuff so I didn't really know what the game would be like. I was also able to get the game, the pre-order bonuses, and its season pass for $50 all together from gamestop the day after it came out so I had a good deal. I like Connor (though he was nowhere near Ezio's level.) The scenery change was necessary and worked surprisingly well, I had no idea about the naval combat and that blew me away, I didn't care that the side stuff wasn't integrated with the story 'cause I was gonna do all of that anyway, the multiplayer continues to be fantastic, and I thought the idea of jumping through trees Naruto style as a gamestop employee told me sounded terrible but it was pretty fun. The only thing I can say I was disappointed by was that there were too many eavesdropping missions.

I'd say that people's expectations were way too high but I'm only saying that because they weren't my expectations.

Avatar image for hailinel
Hailinel

25785

Forum Posts

219681

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 10

User Lists: 28

Edited By Hailinel

Don't forget about Gomez?

Fuck Gomez.

Avatar image for joey_ravn
JoeyRavn

5290

Forum Posts

792

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 3

Edited By JoeyRavn

I'm mildly disappointed by the lack of Darksiders II in Most Disappointing Game. ME3, even with its terrible ending and very noticeable flaws, was fun to play. Assassin's Creed III is disappointing, nothing is resolved in a clear, concrete way by the end of the game... but AC is a series that has been running out of steam since AC:B. It shouldn't have come as a surprise to anyone. Or, at least, anyone should have expected to be great or terrible in equal parts.

But, man. Darksiders II. It took everything that made the first one so good and turned it upside down. And Vigil included that stupid, pointless loot system that didn't really do anything for the game. Fuck that game. Seriously, fuck that game.

Edit: And, yeah. The Lucy Stillman (Kristen Bell) stuff was "revealed" in some terrible Revelations DLC. It was like an hour of first person platforming, for fuck's sake.

Avatar image for nickscorner
NicksCorner

569

Forum Posts

5

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By NicksCorner

Mass Effect 3 is clearly the disappointment for me. One of my favourite franchises totally pulled the rug under me.

I agree on the rest of the winners and a great year for downloads.

Avatar image for auron570
AURON570

1778

Forum Posts

1029

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By AURON570

Here-here for The Walking Dead! This has been THE game that finally made me change my mind about all these downloadable games. I feel like this is only the beginning! Walking Dead really set the bar high and I'm really interested to see how other studios respond to this success, and how Telltale is going to follow this up.

Avatar image for mstrmnybgs
MstrMnyBgs

175

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By MstrMnyBgs

@ZHabermann said:

More disappointing then Resident Evil 6? Really?

Really?

Really?

Also I'm so done with hearing about The Walking Dead, yeah I'm sure it's not bad and it has a good story but judging a Heavy Rain-esk, PS2 era looking adventure game as being on par with the games of this generation, like it having a good story is not as important or equal to good gameplay, is an insult and a backstep on what gaming should be...

Sounds like you haven't played it. And to try and discredit it because you don't like its art style or think it has "insulting gameplay", I can't help but laugh, both at that ridiculous notion and at you for making it.

Avatar image for video_game_king
Video_Game_King

36563

Forum Posts

59080

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 54

User Lists: 14

Edited By Video_Game_King

I like how two of the most disappointing games are both four stars. (I'd read why AC3 was disappointing, but I don't want to spoil anything for myself should I happen upon it some day.)

Avatar image for herbiebug
HerbieBug

4228

Forum Posts

43

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By HerbieBug

@Droop said:

Man.. GB crew really likes Walking Dead. And Mass Effect 3 on most disappointing and not Hitman: Absolution? Interesting.

I expect much of that has to do with no one on staff being a fan of Hitman series to the degree that they would feel strongly disappointed by what Absolution turned out to be. Whereas Assassin's Creed series is a big deal for at least Ryan and Brad, if not others.

@President_Barackbar said:

@Zor said:

I take issue with the Waking Dead and Journey being in the download category, since both titles had a disc release... They are both great, but I wouldn't consider either to be a valid choice for any download game awards (unless you also consider all the other games that came out digitally and on disc).

I think this is the exact reason why they want to toss that category out.

They could change it to best small budget title. Or maybe best under, say, $25 at launch. Something like that.

Avatar image for benderunit22
benderunit22

1978

Forum Posts

9567

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 6

User Lists: 1

Edited By benderunit22

The Walking Dead did not work for me at all. It was a matter of the game trying to force me to feel something with cheap tricks. Present me with tough decisions all the time and regardless of what I choose, someone is always gonna be pissed at me, which, over time, made me not give a damn anymore.

The story is also too predictable while it goes to show just how dumb of a concept zombies are in general. Like, every ten minutes I kept thinking, "why don't we just wait until the zombies starve, oh right they don't, because laws of physics and biology don't apply." Then the retarded horror movie tropes of these shambling hordes able to creep up on you unnoticed, not hearing you one time, but going ape-shit when you step on a branch. And of course a clumsy cast who is outsmarted numerous times by literally braindead enemies.

And let me not forget how god awful the gameplay can be. The rare adventure parts are fun, but having to cursor over guys to headshot (or really to do anything) is a pain. In true Telltale fashion, the game also doesn't look all that great, although the artstyle somewhat helps compared to their other games with low-poly character models and muddy textures.

This may sound harsh and overall, I think The Walking Dead is a good game, but the negative experiences I felt playing it (not the general feeling bad about having to make hard choices), are too numerous for me.

Avatar image for deactivated-57f027c6197c3
deactivated-57f027c6197c3

99

Forum Posts

879

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

More disappointing then Resident Evil 6? Really?

Really?

Really?

Also I'm so done with hearing about The Walking Dead, yeah I'm sure it's not bad and it has a good story but judging a Heavy Rain-esk, PS2 era looking adventure game as being on par with the games of this generation, like it having a good story is not as important or equal to good gameplay, is an insult and a backstep on what gaming should be...

Avatar image for president_barackbar
President_Barackbar

3648

Forum Posts

853

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

@Zor said:

I take issue with the Waking Dead and Journey being in the download category, since both titles had a disc release... They are both great, but I wouldn't consider either to be a valid choice for any download game awards (unless you also consider all the other games that came out digitally and on disc).

I think this is the exact reason why they want to toss that category out.

Avatar image for brainling
Brainling

113

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 1

Edited By Brainling

@Sooty said:

Most disappointing game gets 4/5 stars, ok.

Being good, and being disappointing, are not mutually exclusive traits.

Avatar image for efesell
Efesell

7509

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Efesell

@Sooty said:

Most disappointing game gets 4/5 stars, ok.

Great games can still be disappointing.

Avatar image for sooty
Sooty

8193

Forum Posts

306

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 3

Edited By Sooty

Most disappointing game gets 4/5 stars, ok.

Avatar image for gbrading
gbrading

3318

Forum Posts

10581

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 34

User Lists: 5

Edited By gbrading

I thought ME3 would be a shoe-in for Most Disappointing Game. Was Assassin's Creed III really that disappointing?

Avatar image for jimbag
Jimbag

19

Forum Posts

2

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Jimbag

How was Hitman not at least a runner up for Most Disappointing?

Avatar image for christilton
christilton

191

Forum Posts

53

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By christilton

I'd have added Halo 4 to that disappointing list.

Avatar image for zor
zor

822

Forum Posts

10

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 16

User Lists: 18

Edited By zor

I take issue with the Waking Dead and Journey being in the download category, since both titles had a disc release... They are both great, but I wouldn't consider either to be a valid choice for any download game awards (unless you also consider all the other games that came out digitally and on disc).

Avatar image for forkboy
forkboy

1663

Forum Posts

73

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 6

Edited By forkboy

@dr_mantas said:

I can't even believe Mass Effect 3 is a runner up for most disappointing.

Actually, I can, but I totally disagree.

I think ME3 would be in my top 3 most disappointing games for 2012, but that says more about the high expectations I had going in. The game is perfectly fine, but the story doesn't really end in satisfying way, for me at least. And because of how attached I was to the characters & the universe as a whole, ending on a damp squib is disappointing.

Plus something like Resi 6 or Halo 4 weren't games I had any expectations for, so they couldn't disappoint.

Avatar image for ajamafalous
ajamafalous

13992

Forum Posts

905

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By ajamafalous

ME3 not Most Disappointing
 
I lol'd

Avatar image for wsowen02
wsowen02

353

Forum Posts

20

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By wsowen02

Haven't listened to the podcast yet but I would hazard a guess that Brad is THE reason ME3 was not most disappointing game.

Avatar image for killem_dafoe
KillEm_Dafoe

2739

Forum Posts

249

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 6

User Lists: 6

Edited By KillEm_Dafoe
@simkas said:

@OneKillWonder_ said:

No way in hell is ACIII more disappointing than RE6. ACIII came out and was generally pretty well-received. RE6 came out and ended up being complete garbage top to bottom. I expected it to at least play well and be a fun time, if not even be good as a RE game, but naw son, turns out it was an abomination.

It's not much about which game is worse, it's about which one was more dissapointing, RE6 wasn't as disappointing because it already wasn't looking like it's going to be all the great quite a while before release, when all trailers and footage was just showing a bunch of action and a complete lack of actual survival horror.

So basically, RE6 was less dissapointing because most didn't expect as much from it.

When they put out that first trailer, I thought it looked fucking amazing. They had actual zombies in dark, urban environments for one, which lead me to believe the series was finally getting back on the right track. I don't love RE5, but it's an alright game, and what I was expecting was some of the old mixed with the new. The game's biggest problems are that it controls terribly and has almost non-top QTE's, something you definitely don't get out of pre-release footage and trailers.
Avatar image for tennmuerti
Tennmuerti

9465

Forum Posts

1

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 7

Edited By Tennmuerti

Ezio maturing (more) out of his pissant youthful self was the single redeeming part of Revelations.

If you still thought that the over reaching Desmond story was headed anywhere or could have concluded in any satisfactory manner after the amount of extra shit they pile onto it over 2, Brotherhood, Revelations, then really there is only yourself to blame. Anytime a narrative gets spun so out of control rarely if ever do the writers manage to tie it together at the end.

The game looks absolutely fantastic on PC i would say better then FC3, and the way Connor moves is so well done it's a statement of his character in and of itself. The naval battles are great (and gorgeous) and were surprisingly varied. Homestead missions are a joy to witness unfolding. Connor's righteous naïveté is what makes him his own unique defined character, just like Altair's arrogance and Ezio's annoying playboy attitude. All of the three AC characters start with major flaws and over time work through them, just like Connor's naivete is hammered at, called out and challenged towards the end. The side mission stuff in AC series was for the most part rarely tied together well to the narrative in any of the games. As someone who has long since been playing this series for the stories of the actual characters Altair, Ezio, Connor and has wrote off Desmond's story as not the primary motivator, the disappointing Desmond bits did not affect my enjoyment of the game in the slightest. AC3 also once again pushed the multiplayer forward, fixing and improving many of the missteps of Revelations MP. Overall I enjoyed AC3 a great deal, tho it seems i'm in a minority in this on this site.

Let's be clear Desmond out of the animus stuff is garbage, no argument there. But i saw the mess forming a mile away, and 99% of AC games for me are about the actual past assassins in them, not Desmond.

ME3's ending however managed to sour my feelings on the entire series retroactively.

Avatar image for fatalbanana
fatalbanana

1116

Forum Posts

5

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

Edited By fatalbanana

@Kingpk said:

@mrfluke: ME3, for the most part, was fun to play and had some great moments the led to an ending that didn't make some people satisfied. AC III had the opening scene in the opera house and then a whole bunch of mediocre. The American Revolution setting is wasted, most of the side stuff is COMPLETELY irrelevant and the ending is (IMO) a bigger FU to fans of the series than ME3's was.

Totally, but I wouldn't say the American Revolution setting was wasted .. Maybe it wasn't done as well as it could have been though I thought what they had was pretty awesome and cool to see (even if some of the possibly cooler stuff was rushed through). I totally agree with you about the story though the last few hours or so of that game is total bullshit. I enjoyed my time through for the most part, I didn't do much side-questing at all and the main game play was exciting enough but man that ending is awful.

Avatar image for mrfluke
mrfluke

6260

Forum Posts

-1

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

Edited By mrfluke

@Kingpk: yea your not wrong, AC3 ending was a real "HAHA FUCK U!" kind of deal, but the connor stuff for me ended good, not great, but it ended good, so im interested in seeing what they do with connor or their next history assassin (which rumors are circulating that the next assassin will be in brazil) as i cant give a shit anymore what they do with the modern day story after that ending.

but for me i felt betrayed by mass effect 3, the themes of "the cycle" and "inevitability" were not the themes i associate the mass effect 3 series with, and to me it comes off as them trying to be "edgy" and them trying to give the universe more complexity than it required.

for me mass effect themes were about "breaking the inevitability", "overcoming all odds" "defeating the unstoppable threat", "galactic unification"

so to not get the payoff i expected of "having a unified galaxy kicking all the reapers asses at the cost of losing the relays with you dying next to anderson watching your victory after activating the crucible "

i couldnt help but think that everything i did in that whole series of building up this unified galaxy was for nothing. and i stand by the fact that if they had gone the feel good obviously predictable route happy ending, that this would have been one of the best trilogies in any medium

so yea thats my ramble on why ME3 is the most disappointing game imo :P

Avatar image for rnilla
rNilla

487

Forum Posts

23

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 7

Edited By rNilla

I hope tomorrow's The Walking Dead Award goes to The Walking Dead. It's gonna be close!

Avatar image for dazzhardy
dazzhardy

1513

Forum Posts

4300

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 4

Edited By dazzhardy

First off, Mass Effect 3 wasn't disappointing, the ending of it was (for most people). Now, you might argue that the meat of the game wasn't up to the same calibur as Mass Effect 2, but it was at least competent. 
 
I can't speak much about AC3, I played it for 2 hours and haven't gone back to it yet. Maybe that speaks volumes. 
 
But Resident Evil 6, that's another story. RE4 was such a high point, it not only raised the bar, it pretty much redifined a genre. RE5 was a slight mis-step in horror terms, but it played better, and had enough of an OTT story that you kinda went with it. RE6 somehow managed to take everything before it and somehow make it all worse. I dragged myself through that game, and every time I found myself thinking "hey, maybe this isn't so bad" it managed to point out it was. I was really looking forward to RE6, and the game I got left a terrible taste in my mouth. 
 
I may not of liked the last 2 hours of my single player ME3 game, but the 28 before it I liked. I also played a whole bunch of the Multiplayer. AC3 I got out of a morbid curiosity, I went in with low expectations after I didn't like Revelations much. But RE6 I was excited for. They started showing that game with Leon offing the President who was a Zombie. It was the game I was most looking forward too all year, and the end result is a clear winner of biggest disappointment for me.

Avatar image for phatmac
Phatmac

5947

Forum Posts

1139

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 18

User Lists: 12

Edited By Phatmac

So the Walking Dead is a lock for game of the year, right?

Avatar image for hawkerace
Hawkerace

364

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 0

Edited By Hawkerace

@cannonballBAM: Gross. Get it away from me!

Avatar image for simkas
simkas

673

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By simkas

@OneKillWonder_ said:

No way in hell is ACIII more disappointing than RE6. ACIII came out and was generally pretty well-received. RE6 came out and ended up being complete garbage top to bottom. I expected it to at least play well and be a fun time, if not even be good as a RE game, but naw son, turns out it was an abomination.

It's not much about which game is worse, it's about which one was more dissapointing, RE6 wasn't as disappointing because it already wasn't looking like it's going to be all the great quite a while before release, when all trailers and footage was just showing a bunch of action and a complete lack of actual survival horror.

So basically, RE6 was less dissapointing because most didn't expect as much from it.

Avatar image for cornbredx
cornbredx

7484

Forum Posts

2699

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 15

Edited By cornbredx

Completely agree. AC3 was very disappointing.

Avatar image for killem_dafoe
KillEm_Dafoe

2739

Forum Posts

249

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 6

User Lists: 6

Edited By KillEm_Dafoe

No way in hell is ACIII more disappointing than RE6. ACIII came out and was generally pretty well-received. RE6 came out and ended up being complete garbage top to bottom. I expected it to at least play well and be a fun time, if not even be good as a RE game, but naw son, turns out it was an abomination.

Avatar image for byterunner
byterunner

348

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By byterunner

man, some people here are really upset that ME3 didn't win most disappointing. I mean sure, the ending wasn't amazing. (And I know that it railroads your RPing, but I don't particularly mind the endings given) But no need to have a hissy fit about it

Avatar image for pudge
Pudge

1305

Forum Posts

328

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 11

Edited By Pudge

So I assume for best Story, Patrick just rewrote all the nominations while everyone else was gushing over how Walking Dead handled the death of children right?

Avatar image for kerse
kerse

2496

Forum Posts

42

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 8

Edited By kerse

I was just as disappointed with ME3 as everyone else and I absolutely agree that AC3 was the most disappointing game of the year. It was just all around bad, at least ME3 had a ton of stuff I still really liked. AC3 was just incredibly disappointing.

Avatar image for tastycakesmcg33
TastyCakesMcG33

103

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By TastyCakesMcG33

I would have taken Resident Evil 6 over AC3, but I still am ok with the pick. Was sad at both.

Avatar image for terramagi
Terramagi

1167

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Terramagi

TWD really has to fucking get stomped in the final awards.

That shit is not running away with half the fucking awards. Fuck those guys.

Avatar image for hermes
hermes

3000

Forum Posts

81

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 7

Edited By hermes

I agree. Assassins Creed 3 was a huge disappointment.
I don't think the main character is that bad, but the biggest issue the game has is lack of cohesion. The old phrase of the kitchen sink. It felt like the designers had a big brainstorm and then included every idea they got.

Avatar image for efesell
Efesell

7509

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Efesell

Most disappointing AC3..

Yeaaah..I guess so. In some ways.

Sure was a lot of fun though.