"Needs more Atlus" message received.
I also swapped out others that had zero votes. Take Two really surprised me, as I'd think GTA IV, Red Dead, LA Noire, Borderlands, etc. would get someone's vote.
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"Needs more Atlus" message received.
I also swapped out others that had zero votes. Take Two really surprised me, as I'd think GTA IV, Red Dead, LA Noire, Borderlands, etc. would get someone's vote.
Konami.
really?
you know mods and admins can modify the polls right
I do. I also know no one did, despite several requests in the thread.
I SHALL VOTE FOR KING UBI AGAIN.
I was just sort of trolling with Konami.
God damn it. It just dawned on me that 2K published BioShock also.
HEY, CKA, USE YOUR MAGIC POWERS AND TRADE SEGA FOR TAKE TWO AGAIN.
I didnt even play vanquish but i had more fun with it than i did with gta or red dead.
Call me when someone makes a sandbox game that doesnt feel like a jack of all trades, master of none.
BATTLEFIELD!NHL!EA!
Valve, by a landslide.
In other eras, I would certainly favor other publishers. Sega, or even Campcom, during the Dreamcast heyday. Microsoft, with the advent of the original Xbox, was doing some awesome stuff. Nintendo has many classic games, but post-2006 has contributed but a mere handful (Super Mario Galaxy, and, um, er, yeah) over a spectrum of new and gimmicky and expensive hardware options.
To be honest, the last proprietary console I bought was the Wii, and I'm sure you can guess how many hours that's been used lately. If I can get it on Steam, or GOG, or straight from the developer, and can know that I'll always be able to run the game on my PC, why bother with this console crap if it's going to be junk another hunk of hardware to lug around?
But the games is really where it's at, baby, and Valve, not considering their digital platform, has a stellar track record. HL-Episode 2 was an awesome contribution to one of my favorite games of all time. Portal turned the FPS on its head—never before have I seen so many non-traditional gamers get sucked into a game like that. And Team Fortress 2, while eating the souls of some of my friends, still appears to be one of the most creative and supported multiplayer games that exists. And, of course, Left 4 Dead is one of the most brilliant cooperative games I've had the pleasure of playing. Don't forget Alien Swarm, that fun free little gem. "Bah, they're all FPS's," you might balk. Were not most games in the SNES era 2D sidescrollers? There's an incredible amount of room for creativity, and Valve has a penchant for telling really good stories through gameplay.
Valve seems keen on appreciating really, fundamentally good games, as opposed to capitalizing on selling points that mask very conservative, "merely adequate" design decisions from a lot of the major publishers. Maybe that's a bit harsh; obviously money is a huge issue, and game budgets have skyrocketed. Not to say that these publishers haven't released good games in the past seven years—they all have. But Valve is the one that stands out from the rest for me.
Sorry, that was clearly your point and you can't just make things better by adding one line of apology.Quote:
not to say that these publishers haven't released good games in the past seven years—they all have.
Though that does make you a step above EA who is horrible and loves it.
And so does TNL.
Changed my vote to Atlus.
All is well with the world.
I loved The Hunger Games! When does Scholastic Press's next book come out?
It's not apologetic. For every Mario Galaxy 1 that Nintendo releases, there's a New Super Mario Bros. (hardly anything "new" about it), another Zelda with a silly name (wake me up when this becomes compelling again), or Pokemon. For every ounce of brilliance, there's a pound of carefully polished "been there, done that," which is depressing because I would certainly have called Nintendo my favorite publisher as a kid.
This is a tough topic to quantify, though, because Nintendo, for instance, has so many smaller studios working under that greater publishing body. Valve tends to only put its name as a publisher on games it has strictly developed. And where do you draw the line at "publishing"? Half of that list has their own digital distribution platforms, which in my mind is a facet of publishing in itself.
I don't think it's apologetic to say I loved Crysis but think EA is a shitty, greedy publisher on the whole.