Rainbird said:
To be fair, these are the best implemented QTEs I have ever encountered. It's a bit hard to explain, but they are much better than the QTEs of God of War for example, which are just normal QTEs. |
First of all, that phrase isn't about defending against criticism. It means you are stating good points in spite of the criticism, which is the context we see with The Nostalgia Critic and Zero Punctuation. In short, if you just don't agree with me, the phrase doesn't apply. I know that seems nitpicky, but I get annoyed seeing that phrase overused.
Second of all, even if they aren't split second, like God Of War or Resident Evil 4 and actually give you a moment to figure out which button to press (one of the really good gameplay aspects of Chop Till You Drop), it's still annoying to have them placed in illogical moments. Why press up on the right analog stick to open a door? I could understand fumbling with keys, but opening doors is not a pass or fail action in most real worlc circumstances, which are most of the times you open doors. I could get it if Ethan had because of something like a shaking hand due to his problems, but not the other characters.
Other moments I get, like picking up or dropping the bottle Shelby tries to use to stop the robber. But why have a QTE to raise his arms? That's not a pass or fail thing in real life either. Perhaps there could be a choise, but that logically would be a do or refuse option, not something you screw up by not pressing the shoulder buttons at the same time.
BTW, this is not singling the game out. I've been turned off by quite a few games when the controls just didn't work for me. Even Timesplitters 2, which I otherwise thought kicked ass, I ended up returning because there isn't a reticule on all the time, and the auto locking doesn't work properly. The reason that mattered is that I couldn't complete a single level that wasn't on easy because I had to go on aim mode to hit anything and would get wasted before going halfway through the level. If that game was ported to the Wii and/or PS3 with the arc controller, I would be really happy about that.
A flashy-first game is awesome when it comes out. A great-first game is awesome forever.
Plus, just for the hell of it: Kelly Brook at the 2008 BAFTAs