Oh my goodness Light No Fire looks so good. I really hope they've learned the right lessons from No Man's Sky, because that trailer looked like everything I want from a game.
I have some faith in Hello Games. I think being skeptical is absolutely the right call, but from what I can tell Sean seems like a decent guy that just got way too excited and started promising the world to people.
The worst part of the NMS incident is that other companies have started doing the same thing deliberately.
I actually didn't get that sense this time. Certainly the trailer left a lot to the imagination, and that's letting me imagine impossible features that weren't shown. But I thought Murray was very tame in his explanation. He didn't really promise anything beyond a giant procedural world with multiplayer, and we know they can deliver on that. Everything else might suck. I get why people are skeptical about this, but I'm feeling confident that the final product will match what was shown here.
What? No! I'm just surprised that Spider-man 2 didn't win anything at all. Even Alan Wake 2 won stuff and the game had only been out for less then a month before the nominees were announced.
Holy shit I didn't know that was one of the anouncements! Pony Island was so good, perfect length and amazingly immersive story wise. Inscription I really liked too but somehow I fell off after a few hours, still gathering dust on my PS5.
Old Gods of Asgard live was amazing, and Alan Wake 2 NG+ next Monday, which is huge (for reasons I won't explain, y'alls will just have to play the game).
I had other things to say but I'm too excited about that, so I'm going to bed.
Sea of Stars took that one. I'm pretty sure the winners are voted on by the same panel that submitted the nominees, but I could be wrong. I guess they could have also changed their minds after the nominees were announced and the backlash happened.
Yeah. Basically the people who pick the nominees vote, and the public is also allowed to vote and their results count as 1 vote. Its mainly game news outlets that do the nominees and voting
I really dislike that it's game news outlets that get the vote, because they're just plain gonna have a different outlook on games than people who don't have to engage with ones they both do and don't like as a job, and it really shows in the kind of games that get picked (shorter main storylines, narrative-driven), and the ones that don't (sandboxes, open-world games, strategy, simulation games, etc).
And that's only even when it's not a selection of the 5 most well-known games, since just like the Academy Awards, not all of them have even played all the games they're voting on.
Well typically the outlet convenes with a bunch of people who have played a wide variety of games, so I feel they have a pretty good pool of minds to pull from.
Also I don't think it's a bad system compared to having it be all user voted. Golden joysticks already exist for 100% public vote, and that can be easily influenced by bots and the like. Also half of the games nominated for game of the year this year were open world games that were not short. I mean I don't think many expected in January a crpg would win in a year a Zelda game came out ¯\_(ツ)_/¯