Senlis said:
First off, you have no idea what JRPGs I've played. Secondly, your post makes little sense. I assume your criticising my assessment that JRPG story can't compete with movie/book story. Movies are a non-interactive form of entertainment. They are mainly story driven (also flashy effects driven, but they tend to amount to bad movies). Books are a better example of what I am trying to say. They are also non-interactive, just like the story of (most) JRPGs. When I say non-interactive, I mean the story progresses in such a way that the player has no (or little) method of changing it. Great video games have a hard time competing with great books or great movies when it comes to the story. I would say it is impossible to compete with books and movies. Why? because story is the only thing a book or movie has to worry about. Video games have to worry about programming, design, graphics (yes, I know movies have to worry about this too), testing, gameplay, etc. In other words, the games that are trying to focus on story will be outdone by a good book. Period. I don't see why anyone would try to argue this. WRPGs tend to have a story that is interactive. By that, I mean that you can guide the direction the dialogue and story goes. That is something a non-interactive medium, movies and books don't do (or don't do well. Choose your own adventure books tend to suck). |
If you would've played games with really great story you wouldn't have said that statement.
Especially the movie statement, there are several games with plots that are better than the plot of every movie ever created.
Oh, and almost every time, a WRPGs stpry isn't interactive, the twists are the same twists, the characters are the same characters, the ending can sometimes be different, but the ending doesn't reflect the story up to this point, I can give you KotOR as an example for this.
Bet with Dr.A.Peter.Nintendo that Super Mario Galaxy 2 won't sell 15 million copies up to six months after it's release, the winner will get Avatar control for a week and signature control for a month.