December 17, 2013

Beyond: Two Souls (feat. Kamen Rider Fourze)

So.  Not too long ago, the Two Best Friends -- or technically the Super Best Friends, since Matt and Pat brought Woolie along for the "Sadness" -- finished their LP of Beyond: Two Souls.  I’m on record of saying that I would sacrifice a goat for the gang to play the game from start to finish, and my prayers were indeed answered.  It certainly saved me the trouble of playing the game beyond the demo.  And as it turns out, the Best Friends did me (and our species) a greater service than they could have ever imagined.

Yikesy mikesy.  I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: if I had played Two Souls for myself, from start to finish, it would easily be the WORST game I’ve played all year.

It’s like a thirty-car pileup on top of a train wreck on top of an oil spill on top of a forest fire, with a ruined birthday party thrown in for good measure.  This game -- and I can’t even use the word “game” properly -- gets so much wrong it’s almost fascinatingly terrible.  Almost.  I’m pretty sure I never bore David Cage and his crew at Quantic Dream any ill will before; that’s true even now, but after seeing them at their “best” I can’t say I have even an eighth of the good will I had beforehand.  Whatever they’re cooking up next, if it’s anything like Two Souls they need to start over. 

A part of me was willing to start this post by asking “Has David Cage ever played a video game?”  It was going to segue into how you could use the medium to tell or enhance a story, given that his game has been done, and done better.  But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that wasn’t the right question to ask.  There isn’t even a question I need to ask.  Why?  Because I have a theory.

David Cage doesn’t need to play more video games.  He needs to watch something dumb.

WARNING: Spoilers for Beyond: Two Souls AND Kamen Rider Fourze coming your way.  One of those is worth caring about.  The other isn’t.  Guess which one.

Enough talk.  Play him in, Mortimer!


Before I get too ahead of myself, let me say something upfront: when I say David Cage needs to watch something dumb, I don’t mean that in a way that makes 2011’s Kamen Rider Fourze out to be any lesser of a show.  Indeed, I think Fourze is fantastic -- to the point where I’d say it has no right to be as good as it is, seeing as how it’s more or less a “kid’s show.”  I’d sure as hell watch it (all over again) before I played Two Souls

But with that in mind, I have no problem admitting that Fourze is a dumb, dumb, dumb series.  Intrinsically dumb, that is; 75% of its soundtrack consists of blasting guitars, the first episode has a mech suit straight outta Robotech, the collectible toys helper robots are based on fast food, and you’d be forgiven for thinking that the show is pretty much Gurren Lagann meets The Breakfast Club…especially considering that the lead writer for the former is the lead writer for this series.  A series, it’s worth noting, that by design is about a guy in a weird suit punching out guys in weirder suits as flamboyantly as possible.  It’s a show full of catch phrases, over-the-top personalities, overflowing machismo, and the overriding theme (of course) being the power of friendship.  From start to finish, it’s completely unapologetic about what it is and what it’s trying to do.

And in a way, that’s kind of what makes it brilliant.


If you’re wondering what this bout of gushing has to do with Two Souls, then it’s probably because I want to delay talking about that “game” for as long as possible.  (It’s not even worth talking about how it botches its game aspect.)  Or to be more precise, I want to give the proper setup.  If I were to make a straight Let’s Discuss post about 2Souls, I’d be doing posts on it for several months.  That I can pretty much guarantee you -- and that is something I seriously don’t want to do.  So to counteract that, and to inject some much-needed positivity into Cross-Up, I’m going to do things differently. 

This is going to be a compare-and-contrast sort of post.  I think I can pare down my complaints and the major issues with 2Souls into three points -- and I can explain what I mean more thoroughly by using Fourze as an example.  So, like the Goofus and Gallant comics of old…and new, apparently…let’s go ahead and put these two stories side-by-side, and see what we can learn.

I’ll go ahead and give you the crux of this thing, though: 2Souls is awful because of its lead character, Jodie.  Fourze is awesome because of its lead character, Gentaro.  Why, you ask?  Well, I’ll gladly explain…with about five thousand words.  Strap in.


Jodie has no personality.
I’ve mentioned this before, but it’s worth bringing up again: from now on, I’m going to start applying the Three-Word Rule to characters.  That is, if I can’t apply at least three words to describe a character’s personality, independent of what they look like, what they can do, or what their position in their world might be, then it highlights the fact that said character has some notable problems.  I’d like to think it’s a rule that’s more of a formality than an ironclad measure, but when I think about the number of characters that don’t pass the Three-Word Rule, can’t help but get a little nervous.  And now  I can pretty confidently add Jodie Holmes to that list -- which is a game-breaker when the main character of the game has no personality.

I’ve heard the argument that in a game like 2Souls, the player character(s) can’t have a personality because it would create a divide between the player and the game -- the independent thought versus the narrative.  I don’t think that’s necessarily a dead-end (like others have), but this game doesn’t do anything to make an argument for itself.  Jodie is caught in a purgatory, torn between being a puppet for the player and a slave to the plot…but neither of them works well together.  At all. 


What you say and do with Jodie only has the most tangential effect on what kind of person she becomes at story’s end, and that’s not helped by the fact that the story is told in a fragmented form.  What could have happened to turn the shy bookworm Jodie into the rebellious punk rocker Jodie?  We’ll never know, because there’s no connective tissue between one and the other.  Worse yet, it just highlights how little your input matters; the Best Friends immediately opted for revenge so bookworm Jodie could get back at the teens that mistreated her.  So why, post-time skip, would she want to go out and hang with anyone?  Wouldn’t she become a bitter recluse after that and other events? 

But the biggest sin that Jodie commits is that she’s got zero emotional range.  I’m not trying to take shots at Ellen Page here -- she’s a better actor than I’ll ever be -- but she’s pretty only allowed to have four modes throughout the entire game.  The most common two are teary-eyed despair and fury over being slighted.  The other two, unsettlingly stoic behavior and cloying awkwardness, are lucky to appear in more than two chapters -- and that’s a generous estimate.  None of those four are very compelling.  And as a result, she’s not very compelling.  But that just feeds into another set of problems…but I’ll get to that in a minute.

Let’s switch over to something good.


Gentaro has a simple but effective personality.
It’s a strange day indeed when a character with hair like that is more believable than someone whose face was LITERALLY scanned into a game.  But here we are.  Now, to be fair, I’m not going to say that a character like Gentaro is one hundred percent possible, or even fifty percent possible.  But compared to the sad-sack taking top billing in 2Souls, he might as well be a revelation.

I can describe this guy in three words: passionate, friendly, and forgiving.  Those might be the only three words that can be used to describe him (besides dumb, maybe), but that’s all I need out of a character like this.  From start to finish, Gentaro’s goal -- something else Jodie lacks consistently, now that I think about it -- is to “be friends with everyone in his school”.  And how is he going to do that?  With almost manic, feverish dedication.  He’ll get in the face of every student he comes across, forcing himself on them and demanding their friendship.  He’s consistently entertaining to watch, because his passion has him doing things that no normal person would do.  He’s the embodiment of the larger-than-life spirit a fictional character can show.   He’s overflowing with conviction and good intentions…and that’s precisely what lands him in trouble on several occasions.


He’s a dumb character, but believe it or not he actually goes through some (subtle) character development.   At the start of the show, Gentaro’s got good intentions, but they also make him incredibly inflexible.  He wants your friendship, but he wants it on his terms -- he wants you to follow his lead, and screw whatever concerns you might have.  Over the course of the show’s run, he realizes that in order to be friends with a few of the more prickly students of his school (his foil, along with another Rider), he has to understand and accept their circumstances.  He needs to learn how to listen and solve their problems, not just march past -- or even over -- them.  Does he mellow out?  No, of course not.  But he does get better about his methodology.

Bear in mind that this is all independent of when Gentaro puts on his suit.  But it is worth noting that his personality informs his fighting style -- a head-on attacker who’ll use every weapon he’s got (and then some) to bash the Zodiart of the day.  Incidentally, this means that he’ll also willingly use VERY experimental technology -- the Astro Switches -- as his primary weapons.  Some of them work out, while others lead to him getting blown up, electrocuted, or otherwise bouncing around like a doof.  But over time, he learns the value of practice and preparation, and using his head.  Well, somewhat.  Relatively.

…Give him a break.  He got a 4 on his test.


Jodie is barely a presence even in the scenes she’s alone in.
If I had suddenly forgotten everything I know about 2Souls, and you showed me the game from start to finish while telling me that Jodie is the main character, I would have asked you “Really?”  And then I would have given you a much-deserved DDT.

It’s bad enough that Jodie can only be reliably counted on to cry or rage, because the definition of a good character has apparently become “someone you should feel sorry for, so cry for her.  Cry, you fools!  CRY!”  It’s even worse when you realize that her actual effect on the plot is either minimal or contrived -- and no matter which road it takes, it (and she) is never compelling.  This is a character that’s put at risk of sexual assault AT LEAST four times throughout the game, forcing the player to step in as her Stand ghost-buddy to protect her from the big scary men.  (And you thought the Tomb Raider reboot had it bad.)  She’s constantly getting strung around by forces beyond her understanding -- a patsy who gets used by scientists and the CIA to clean up dumbass evil ghost experiments and kill off African presidents because reasons.  Stupid reasons, given that you’d think Jodie the CIA agent would read up on political affairs before going on a mission…but in her defense, she had to make goo-goo eyes at her superior officer, which I’m pretty sure is not something CIA agents are allowed to do.  But hey, she’s a female character, so of course she has to fall in love with a plank of wood, right?  Also, as a female character she is required to have the shit beat out of her so you know she's tough and capable, and not at all just a punching bag so the writers can indulge in torture fetishism.


Jodie has absolutely nothing of interest about her when it comes to her personality…but things only get worse when it comes to her skill set.  As you’ve probably heard by now, players take control of Jodie as well as Aiden, her ghost-buddy who acts on her behalf to possess/choke enemies or interact with the environment.  But he has more problems than that; he can put up a shield that protects Jodie from everything, he can use his magic to cure Jodie of anything, and his movement range varies from a few dozen feet to infinity.  So basically, Jodie can solve any problem she comes across.  She’s invincible.  Her struggles don’t ring true because there’s no tension.  No chance of failure, unless the game contrives reasons for danger by way of omission.  (Why doesn’t Aiden steal money for Jodie when she’s homeless, since we know he can act autonomously?  Why doesn’t Aiden just pull up his shield whenever Jodie’s in danger?  Why doesn’t Aiden just kill everybody?) 

And as if that wasn’t bad enough, the game warps around to make Jodie useful, at the expense of the player’s suspension of disbelief.  A five-foot, hundred pounds soaking wet girl can punch out soldiers?  And suddenly wear the uniform made for someone a foot taller than her?  And tries to sneak into a Chinese underwater ghost base in spite of being white…when there’s a Chinese guy five feet away from her?  I don’t believe for a second that Jodie is capable of anything but crying and flipping out.  And because of that, I don’t see her as anything more than a walking, talking, weeping pain in the ass.  Why is she the main character?  That’s a question no man is equipped to answer, at least not without severe brain damage and a swimming pool’s worth of beer.     


Gentaro dominates nearly every scene he’s in.
There is never a doubt in my mind that this is Gentaro’s show.  It goes beyond him being the titular Kamen Rider Fourze; he’s the character that defines and pushes forward the show’s ideas, as any main character should.  He is the show’s premiere asskicker, seeing as how the only other character that can even hurt the Zodiarts is another Rider (and the occasional power armor-piloting comrade), but he’s playing a mental game of tug-of-war in-universe and out of it that sets him up as the lead character.

He’s loud, boisterous, and determined.  He’s THE embodiment of hot blood, and exactly the sort of character you’d expect from the mind behind Gurren Lagann (so I guess it’s appropriate to call him Kamina 2.0...or Simon 2.0, given his character development).  His passion is undeniable, but it’s part of what makes him a character worth getting invested in.  Gentaro strikes me as the type of person who thinks that if you flap your arms hard enough, you’ll be able to fly.  You know it’s wrong, and stupid, and goes against nature, but you can’t help but shake your head, smile, and say “Bless your heart” -- because you know by the time you do, he’ll be leaping off the roof to give it a shot.  But he’ll leap right back up, smile, and the two of you can laugh about it over manly discussions on what’s the greatest enka song ever created. 


That all said, I feel like it’s important to remember that just because Gentaro is passionate doesn’t necessarily mean that he’s got no emotional range.  Granted he’s usually hot-blooded, but he is capable of being quiet, or introspective, or respectful.  He just tends to go about things his own way.  More to the point, there’s a concept that he (and the writers of Fourze) understands that Jodie (and David Cage/Quantic Dream doesn’t: the power of going out of character.  The expectation is that at almost all times, Gentaro’s going to be a loud, grinning idiot.  And in many cases, that’s true.  BUT in the moments when he isn’t -- when he does something you wouldn’t expect of him, like engaging in a rain-soaked duel with a friend-turned-Zodiart with none of his usual gusto -- you know something’s up.  And it carries more impact.

I don’t want to spoil too much about what happens in the show (because you need to watch it, otherwise you’re doing the internet wrong), but I will say one thing.  When Jodie cries in 2Souls, you just go with it and move on to the next scene, wondering when you actually get to play the game.  When Gentaro cries in Fourze, you know damn well he’s got a good reason to.  And believe me, he does.  There are a couple of scenes late in the show’s run that not only exemplify his character development, but make incredible use of going out of character.  Simply put, characters that have been happy, smiling idiots from minute one of episode one are trying and failing to fight off tears -- and you can’t help but do the same.  “No, no, no, don’t do that, you’re not supposed to be this kind of character,” you might think (because that’s what I thought while wiping my soaking face).  To say nothing of what happens a few scenes later, as well as the final episode at large.  Fair warning: the final episode may or may not utterly destroy your soul.  


It’s that powerful, because it understands how to make use of different tones, emotions, and natures of characters.  Fourze -- and Gentaro, by and large -- masquerades as a loud and brash moron, when in reality they have a better understanding of emotional depth that a “serious drama” like 2Souls wishes it had.  The “kid’s show” has proven its intelligence years before gamers were greeted by Jodie’s immensely zoomed-in, open-mouthed face shoved into the screen. 

There’s something wrong with the situation when I get more out of a show with a conehead-suited protagonist than a multi-million dollar pity party starring a Stand user.


Jodie is only someone you care about because otherwise there would be no “game”.
You know, it’s not often that I think to myself, “Gee!  I sure know what I’m talking about in this situation!  I must be a better writer than I thought!”  But damn, did I sniff out this problem early:

I don’t feel like I’m getting the context I need from the demo, and it’s enough to make me worry that I wouldn’t get it in the full game.  But I’ll give the benefit of the doubt and assume that there is.  Let’s pretend that everything I want -- and you want -- will be explained in the full title.  In the context of this demo, why is killing the primary option?  I don’t know who Jodie is or what she’s been through besides the experiment and training in a gym.  I can deal with her trying to escape, but why am I being railroaded into murder?  If Jodie is so desperate and/or resolute that killing is her primary goal, then aren’t the police and SWAT teams justified in trying to capture her?  Why am I supposed to sympathize with someone who chokes an officer to death with her handcuffs (which may very well be the only way to escape from the second capture)?  Is this supposed to be a bit of subversion?  Am I actually playing as the villain?  I sure as shit hope that’s the case, because a tragic backstory isn’t enough to justify the murder of people just trying to do what they think is right, and it shouldn’t be enough.” 

Is Jodie the villain?  Not directly, but that’s only because the plot (such as it is) makes its antagonists into strawmen we’re not allowed to sympathize with -- and before you ask, yes, Willem Dafoe suddenly decides to become the bad guy at the end because A) he’s the number-two actor in the game, and B) rrrrrrrrrrrrreasons!  But Jodie doesn’t make a very good argument for herself.  There’s no internal consistency to this character, and not just because of the time skips.  She’ll flip-flop in the middle of scenes, deciding to punch out or kill people just to fill some “you go girl!” quota.  Remember, no matter what you do the Demo ends with Jodie threatening to kill people just trying to do their job, and this is after she’s already taken a few lives.  But as it turns out, the context for this is that, because she was betrayed by the CIA and killed one person -- setting aside the dozens she had to hurt, kill, or possess along the way, AND the people she willingly let Aiden harass in chronologically-previous chapters -- she suddenly has the right to hurt everyone in her path.  What about their friends and families, Jodie?  What about laying low until the heat dies down?  What about not using your powers to effectively burn down a block of a town?  If you’re going to be a remorseless killer, then there’s a reason why the cops are releasing the hounds on you.


The ending of this game has Jodie (and the player) making the only choice that really matters: deciding whether Jodie, after destroying the government’s big stupid accidental doomsday device -- don’t ask -- elects to go back to the world of the living, or stays dead and travels to “the beyond.”  The Best Friends actually discussed this for a moment, and ultimately decided to leave Jodie dead…as a screw you to the game for forcing a romance on Jodie no matter how much they tried to resist.  Now, normally I’d disagree and choose life no matter what, but in this case, they made the right choice.  They absolutely made the right choice.  In a situation like this, the implication is that Jodie should wave away the beyond -- shown to be a fluorescent paradise -- and head back to the real world to start a new life. 

The problem is that in the context of 2Souls, there’s absolutely no reason for Jodie to go back.  There’s no reason to believe there’s any hope for her.  This is a character that’s consistently under threat of sexual assault, consistently beaten down and lied to, consistently betrayed, consistently left unloved, feared, or hated, consistently forced to face nightmares beyond human comprehension (and nightmares well within them), and consistently shown to be suicidal.  Granted some of those problems are ones she created herself, but the damage has been done.  The sheer oppressiveness of the “story” has completely invalidated the message.  The intent.  The one choice that matters.  Why should the player believe that Jodie’s life will get any better when she’s probably in danger of being pinned to a wall as soon as she walks out of the building? 

This isn’t just my reasoning.  The Best Friends realized the same thing.  Any gamer would, too.  Any idiot would.  Why David Cage couldn’t do the same makes me question the very foundations of reality.


Gentaro is the type of character who you’d gladly ride with to hell and back.
How does the saying go?  Every man is the architect of his own fortune?  I don’t know how you’d say that in Latin, but it’s still a pretty good line regardless.

It’s true that in spite of being played by a real person, Gentaro is as fictional as they come.  He’s the construct of a slew of writers, and probably more than a few business decisions (though in this case, that might actually be a good thing).  But as I said, he’s a more believable character than Jodie will ever be.  Why?  Because even though he appears in a medium that has an even more passive format than the common video game -- or even 2Souls, albeit very slightly -- I believe that this character is living, breathing, and moving on his own.  I believe he’s making his own choices.  I believe he’s acting not just to fulfill the writers’ wishes, but for his own beliefs and satisfaction.  I believe he’s free to choose for himself what he wants to do.

All he wants -- besides punching out the bad guys to protect his school and those in it -- is to make friends with everybody.  Why?  Because when he was a kid, he told his parents that he made a new friend, and that made them happy, so he kept on doing it.  It’s true that his parents died in a car accident (something that he mentions off-handedly, and to my surprise didn’t feed into the main plot vis a vis some big reveal), but he doesn’t let his grief make decisions for him.  He just believes steadfastly in his goal, whether he strides or stumbles toward it.  Not a lot of people, real or fictional, would go to the lengths he does to befriend someone.  But that’s precisely what makes him so charming.  That’s what makes him such an interesting -- and dare I say it, GOOD -- character.


Gentaro is free in a way that Jodie isn’t.  The only reason Jodie saves the day (after spending so much of the game faffing about) is because she just happens to be in the exact place she needs to be to stop the big dumb doomsday machine that shouldn’t have been built oh my God why are you people so stupid.  She has no plan.  No will, no personality, no presence; she’s almost as invisible, and unknowable, as her ghost-buddy.  She’s just a plot device, and a punching bag whose only merit is giving David Cage a chance to indulge in his face fetish by zooming in every chance he gets.  (Seriously, Heavy Rain?  2Souls?  That PS4 tech demo?  Zoomed-in faces aplenty.) 

Jodie is just terrible.  Gentaro isn’t.  He’s energetic.  He’s dynamic.  But most importantly, he has something that every character should have, regardless of whether they’re smiling heroes or stone-faced avengers: CHARISMA.  If they can do what they do in a way that makes them compelling -- an irresistible force that you can’t help but get swept up in -- then they’re more likely to be a character worth remembering, and help make a story worth adoring.  It’s not that hard.  Fourze shows this in every single episode; there are students in trouble, so Gentaro jumps in to help them, be it by taking on their problems or by beating the monster transformation out of them.  (It makes sense in context.)  He’s the kind of guy you want to see more of…while Jodie’s the kind of thing you can’t look at for long thanks to some uncanny valley swan-dives.  Or barring that, just some truly embarrassing horseshit.  


I don’t know how much effort went into 2Souls or Fourze.  Nor do I know the exact budgets for each.  (I’m guessing marketing cut deep into the wallets of both.)  But it’s pretty obvious which one used its effort, talent, and resources a lot better. 

I could go on and on about both.  I could talk about all the failures of 2Souls, be it with the game design or that ramshackle thread they called the plot.  Likewise, I could talk all about what makes Fourze a blast from start to finish, along with what makes it a deeper show than it appears to be at first glance (fun fact: revenge, filial piety, and the effects of drug withdrawal all make appearances)…along with its stumbles (if you thought the Clark Kent/Superman issue was bad, wait till you get a load of the second Rider).  But it’s as I’ve said a hundred times before: the main character defines the story.  The main character makes or breaks the story.  And for all the effort that went into covering Ellen Page’s virtual face with blood, sweat, and tears, she’s been outdone a thousand times over by a grinning moron with a pompadour.


David Cage?  Quantic Dream?  Next time, be reasonable.  Act within your means.  Learn how to make your audience smile before you think you can make them cry.

And that’ll do it for now.  See you guys around…when I figure out how to work Kamen Rider W into a post.


I like how even if I post a clip with zero context, it still makes more sense than 2Souls.

12 comments:

  1. Glad to see another person feels the same way about the virtual hatecrime that was Two Souls.. and somehow stay on topic while gloating about Kamen Rider. I commend you!

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  2. To be fair, it was a pretty easy task. I can't look at Gentaro/Fourze without a big goofy smile sliding across my face. I can't look at Jodie/2Souls without groaning and rolling my eyes. Everything that came after that was a snap.


    That said -- and I hate even thinking this -- I agree with you. 2Souls IS pretty much a virtual hate crime. I don't know what David Cage and his buddies at Quantic Dream are thinking up next, but I hope, DEARLY, that they take the criticisms lobbed at this game to heart.


    Alternatively, I hope they realize that there's more than one emotion in the world besides "sadness." If they can just give me that instead of more try-hard melodrama, I'll salute them.

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  3. Personally, I don't believe Two Souls is too much deserving of our hate. Not because it's shit (because it totally is) but because, after checking up on your comment that a 27 million dollar game is at the low-end of an A-list next gen game I realized that Call Of Duty: Same Shit, Different cover (or Ghosts, for short) cost nearly a hundred million dollars and was dubbed 'the most forgettable piece of crap ever'.

    I think that Beyond signifies something much more than an example of a shitty game: it's a clear sign that the game industry is losing it, spending good money that COULD feed starving children or save Third-World countries not through charity but through some halfway intelligent investment and it instead gets wasted on 3-d photorealistic panoramas. I know I am probably getting way off topic here, but when GTA5 ends up costing 285 million (the GDP of FUCKING MALTA) it means that we have let our entertainment get out of hand and that Two Souls is the schlocky afterbirth.

    Oh and since you mentioned Kamen Rider Fourze, I am just gonna leave this here...*shameless promotion*

    http://shapescapes.blogspot.gr/2013/12/transforming-titans-super.html

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  4. Yeah, I've seen it -- and I haven't forgotten about it, mind. I've actually come up with a few ideas, but the problem lies in the execution of them...along with deciding on which one to go with. And which one is actually, you know, good. But whatever. We'll just see how it goes.


    But yes, you're exactly right about the game industry getting out of hand...which is, unfortunately, common knowledge by now. That Tomb Raider game that came out a while back? Cost about $100 million, as far as I know. Sold three million plus copies. Deemed a financial failure by Square-Enix. Let that sink in for a moment.


    Resident Evil 6 is in the same boat. I don't know how much it cost, but it was made with a team of 600+ members across several studios. Sold about...I think it was 4.8 million or so? Well, it doesn't matter, because that was ALSO deemed a failure by Capcom -- a company that just months ago was reported to barely have enough money to make a game. Let THAT sink in for a moment. A company that makes games almost didn't have the money to make games because it made a game.


    And lest we forget, DmC. Capcom/Ninja Theory originally wanted to sell 5 million copies of that game. When it got closer to release (and the backlash was still in full swing), they lowered the number to 2 million...except money already got pissed away to use "the same motion capture technology as Avatar". Now I'm hearing that DmC barely made 1.1 million sales -- just over half the second projection, and a fifth of the original. Little wonder, then, that Ninja Theory -- the company that, prior to release, suggested that DmC would be a literary evolution designed to take games to the next level -- is now saying that the market is borked and mobile games are the way of the future.


    The question, good sir, is not whether or not the gaming industry is fucked. The question is how hard it's fucked. Which, as it turns out, is plenty.


    But on the plus side, at least The Wonderful 101 came out before it all crashed and burned. If you haven't seen anything of it yet, I would proooooooooooobably head over to YouTube. I have a sneaking suspicion you might like what you see.

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  5. Well, I've heard the argument that "the entertainment industry is recession-proof". There's probably some truth in that (there are probably a ton of movies that reach into the hundred million-dollar range, because reasons), but if the number of studio closures in the game industry are any indication, that's not exactly an ironclad rule.


    It's a shame that 2Souls turned out as bad as it did. It really is. I have to respect the ambition that Cage/Quantic Dream had, but they don't have either the skills OR the vision to make something more than The Try-Hard Bonanza Quest. It's as if they willingly decided to make all the worst possible choices for the game and the story, and in doing so effectively wasted their goodwill AND the funding from Sony AND hundreds, likely thousands, of players' time. It just could have been so much more.


    Speaking of Kostantine, you should probably check his blog, Shapescapes, for a much better what-if version of 2Souls. He does the concept justice in a way Cage and his EMOTIONS never could.


    In any case, if I get one person to check out Fourze, I can consider my life complete. That said, I'll admit right now that while it's got some high quality, it's not the best written of the KR series I've seen. That's not to say that it's bad; it's just that compared to OOO (the series that came before it) it's not quite as...well, let's call it "intelligent" and leave it at that. So I guess if you want Gurren Lagann-style thrills, energy and spirit, start with Fourze. If you want something that'll tickle your brain a bit -- along with a surprisingly-awesome anti-hero/foil/bro/maybe-sorta-love interest -- start with OOO.


    Or go with W. It's got detectives and junk. And a cat that can henshin.

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  6. The blog ate my reply. I'll cut to the chase.

    The film industry is no better. In fact, it's much worse. Video games are cheap in comparison to movies. Pirate's of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest and Curse of the Black Pearl cost 450 million each; Pirate's third installment cost 300 million; Waterworld cost 172 million, and that's not accounting for inflation; Spider Man 3 cost 258 million; Tangled cost 278 million; Wild Wild West cost 278 million. Kevin Smith's Clerks is infamous for its "low budget" cost of 5 million. 27 million is on the low spittin' side of any movie you'd care to name.

    Hollywood gets far too much valor in the videogame community. Our large budgets are a result of cultural excess, not subcultural largesse. I'm simultaneously not worried about the video game community and concerned by the lack of big picture thinking here. Film costs are often obscured by budgets adjusted in post-production, bargaining fees, and increased stock exposure, whereas games tend to get made on the budget they put on paper.

    Yeah, it's feels weird to me too. Games are actually more responsible about their budgets than movies. It's disturbing we don't emotionally recognize that because that means Hollywood producers get a convenient "moral panic" distraction while they bankroll bigger and bigger flops (Percy Jackson was 95 mil, by the way, Voltech). I'm not defending developers, by the way. Every budget I see needs to get slashed. There's no reason for our entertainment to cost this much. This phenomenon is, however, the result of a greater cultural schism.

    But the gaming community seems to shoulder the entire cultural burden by themselves.

    So why do gamers and developers like Jonathan Blow (who seems like an honest craftsman and not a calumny factory like some of his fellows) act as if they're trapped in an industry which singularly thrives on talent abuse? Well, it's because a generation of critical peers have convinced us that we're a problem akin to the tobacco industry and must self-regulate in order to look respectable. Meanwhile, there's a canard tossed out over and over again in video game discussions: well, does it validate the practice of making video games? Can we place it in Plexiglas and label it Exhibit A?

    These people automatically assume we're under trial.

    They should be ashamed of themselves. Nothing on this Earth in movies or books, prose or poetry can stand to validate the medium it's in. Everything has its detractors who believe it doesn't represent the virtues of the medium in which it's placed. You're never going to find a perfect sentence, a perfect book, or a perfect movie that will convince everyone that it's "what it means to video game."

    Yet many gamers (who tend overly associate themselves with the medium to an unhealthy degree by using that label -- myself included) have deluded themselves into thinking this way, and it's tearing the whole community apart. Even if that canard isn't embraced by the larger community, it's pursued tirelessly by its ambassadors.

    I wrote a longer, more eloquent response earlier. My words are clumsy and insufficient here.

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  7. *Yeah, it feels weird to me too.

    I suspect a number of these typos litter the text.

    Whatever. Goin' to bed.

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  8. Repetition of "by the way" in paragraph four. Och.

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  9. This relates to my reply to Konstantine. I found an article soon after my post that demonstrated my point rather well.

    For one, movie costs don't include marketing. Video game costs do.

    Essentially, I only object to the use of "this industry." The entertainment industry as a whole needs to cut back drastically.

    http://www.iii.co.uk/motley-fool/121281/why-you-can%E2%80%99t-compare-grand-theft-auto-5-movie-industry

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  10. That's a pretty damn eloquent and to the point response to me, Sean.

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  11. Percy Jackson was 95 million, huh? God, all the families that could have been fed...and they had to make a movie with a dancing goat man. They just HAD to. As if they sat around a round table and said, "This. This, gentlemen, will be our legacy."


    Someone get me ALL of the drinks.


    I won't deny that the film industry spends about ten times as much on their products as the games industry. I don't even like thinking that amounts of money that large are even possible, let alone spent routinely. But man, the parallels between the two are really starting to become more apparent, aren't they? I might be reaching a bit here, but when the latest Godzilla movie trailer reminds me more of Call of Duty than Godzilla, and this "Edge of Tomorrow" feels more like any given sci-fi TPS than anything else...well, I can't help but be a little worried. But that's a whole can of worms I don't feel like opening.


    I see where you're coming from on "validating the medium" -- well, to some extent, at least. There's no such thing as a perfect game, but even if there was, there's no way anyone can prove that said game is what makes the medium worthwhile. Metal Gear Rising is my personal Game of the Year for a number of reasons, but how could I use it to prove games' worth? I don't know. I doubt it's possible. Plenty of gamers have already shrugged it off, and just trying to convince non-gamers that it's high-quality -- "it" being a game featuring a sombrero-wearing cyborg and the central mechanic being slow-motion, high-fidelity body-severing -- is about as easy as climbing a mountain without arms and legs. I guess the most that can be done (for now at least) is to enjoy the games we can, and try to understand why...maybe so we can ask for, and look for, more like them.


    Whatever the case, another dazzling comment. Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand once again, you've proven that you're at least 1.54 times smarter than me. In at least 1/5th the space of my average.post. MAXIMUM REJOICE.

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  12. Well, Kostantine is pretty much right. I can't top what he said. This industry is so backwards in how they manage budgets and determine financial success, I have no goddamn clue how these people live in their homes, buy food and clothes, and pay their taxes without ending up in the five-block long line for the soup kitchen once a week. No wonder no one has money anymore. It's being shoved into frivolous, forgettable, short-term shlock that will never serve any use to anyone because it will be replaced by more expensive junk that is just as broken. Then we ask why the money is gone and we're sitting in a pig sty.


    But I digress.


    Beyond 2 Souls just sucks on the most fundamental aspects of storytelling. I watched two playthroughs, and I had no clue what was happening. Once I got used to the scatter-brained order of events, I began listing the worst chapters in the whole tale because of how cliche, recycled, and ridiculous they are. The birthday party was a lazily terrible Carrie imitation, the punk phase was just filler - for the sake of following the misconception that all troubled girls dress in dark clothes, be emo, enjoy aggressive rock music, go out and have 30 year old men sexually assault them -, and Dafoe becoming a villain was the most bullshit plot twist I have ever seen. No one is likable, the events take place in a vacuum, many characters appear only once and are forgettable, and no moment was upsetting because of how much you care. For crying out loud, the boob and blood infested trash fest of Elfen Lied had better crafted and justified drama than this lifeless -


    ... Wait. I forgot what I was writing about. Why am I wasting my fingers typing away something so uninspiring when I could be going Christmas shopping? Hmm... better finish up my purchases.


    Meanwhile, I should go back to playing Etrian Odyssey.


    And maybe check out this Kamen Rider Fourze. If Gurren Lagann made my cynical self get swept away so easily, this might be fun to watch.

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