• Etterra@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    If they lean any harder into the sunk cost fallacy they’re going to be walking on the bottom of the ocean.

  • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Is that the same engine they used for Star Field? Because I can hear the creaking from here. It’s absolutely time for a new engine.

  • anonymous111@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I think were seeing diminishing returns in graphics. Some games are almost photo realistic.

    This means that any engine capable of these graphics will be largely future proof.

    They should bite the bullet and build/move to a new engine. It likely won’t need changing unless there is a major breakthrough.

    • kerrigan778@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      People have been saying this since Half Life 2, possibly even longer, then everyone said it about Crysis. To be fair, Cryengine has some validity as a future proof engine. It was first made in 2002, just 5 years after Gamebryo and is still being used in heavily modified forms by a large number of studios. But even that is showing its age and is getting heavily refactored yet again for the Open 3D Engine that the Linux foundation is working on. With that said, the amount of active development and intensive refactoring that the Cryengine has gone through at this point eclipses what has been done for the Gamebryo engine. But it still seems like lack of respect for tech debt is the larger problem than “just switch engines”

  • addie@feddit.uk
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    13 hours ago

    Well; you could use that engine to produce something well-written, deep and interesting like New Vegas, but that still got dinged for being an absurdly bug-ridden release with serious performance issues. It was great despite the engine, not because.

    There’s some slightly-shonky open world engines that support some really impressive RPGs (eg. Baldur’s Gate 3 on the Divinity engine - looks great but performance is arseholes) and some very impressive open-world engines that support some lightweight RPGs (eg. Horizon Forbidden West on the Decima engine - looks great and smooth as butter). And then you’ve got the Creation engine, which looks terrible and has terrible performance, and which runs bugs and glitches in a way that combines into (usually) very shallow RPGs.

    • TriflingToad@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      kenshi is also an awesome game on an old engine. Very excited for the sequel using unreal engine that’s coming out in probably 10 years because the indie devs want to release a finished product

  • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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    16 hours ago

    From experience I know I’ll be downvoted but it is a pretty goddamned impressive engine. And yes that is even considering that Skyrim was buggy, what, 12 years ago?

    • Hazzard@lemm.ee
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      10 hours ago

      Agreed, the way they can preserve the position of any object, anywhere, with thousands of objects and an obscenely large world, is exceedingly impressive.

      What I don’t get is why the hell any of that is a priority. It’s a neat party trick, but surely 99.9% of the gameplay value of arranging items for fun could be achieved on the player ship alone.

      Like… it’s neat that I can pick up, interact with, and sell every single pen and fork on every table. But is it useful, with a carry weight system deincentivizing that? Fussing with my inventory to find what random crap I accidentally picked up that’s taking up my weight? Is that remarkably better than having a few key obvious and useful pickups? Is it worth giving up 60FPS on console, and having dedicated loading screens for nearly every door and ladder around?

      Again, it’s cool that they have this massive procedurally generated world, that a player could spend thousands of hours in. But when that area is boring, does it really beat a handcrafted interesting world and narrative? What good is thousands of hours of content when players are bored and gone before 10 hours?

      So like… from a tech perspective, I respect what Starfield is, and it’s very impressive, but as a game it feels like a waste of a lot of very talented work, suffering from a lack of good direction at the top.

      • VindictiveJudge@lemmy.world
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        2 hours ago

        I could generally take or leave their clutter items, but persistent NPCs with dynamic schedules or the full stat and inventory systems of the PC are still extremely rare, never mind both. Most games simplify NPCs such that they don’t actually have equipment or just have one item (typically an unlootable weapon) and reduce their stats to just HP and defense stats. By contrast, the only difference between an NPC and the PC in a Bethesda game is that the player has controll over the PC.

        For me, if they moved to a new engine it would need those persistent fully-featured NPCs to feel like a Bethesda game. Ten years ago, there wasn’t really anything else that did that. Now, there’s got to be something they can make work. Hell, BG3 has all this stuff, it’s just from a top-down perspective. And it can handle ladders, which Bethesda’s engine still can’t do.

      • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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        4 hours ago

        See, that’s one of the problems of using Creation Engine for Starfield. The game was supposed to be about exploration and space travel, but the big focus of the engine is clutter. All the things that made Skyrim and Fallout feel “lived in”, like NPCs doing different stuff at specific times, were effectively disabled or removed in Starfield. Hell, NPCs’ (complete lack of) reaction make them feel completely “dead”; pedestrians in GTA 4 feel more way more believable and “alive”, despite serving the exact same purpose of filling the screen.

        The proc-gen places also makes zero use of the engine’s strengths, it doesn’t create any “unique” places that could be filled with unimportant npcs and clutter. It’s ironic that Daggerfall, more than 20 years ago, had better proc-gen

      • MonkderVierte
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        9 hours ago

        Btw, Gothic (2? 3 at least) had already holes without loading screens.

    • TrousersMcPants@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      Yeah I feel like people like to just bandwagon against Bethesda games, but no one makes games with as much detail as them. Hell, even Starfield has an insanely robust physics engine.

      • MonkderVierte
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        9 hours ago

        But! That’s cool for a game like KSP, where people craft rotating rings to drive circles in the artifical gravity. But in an RPG? Why do they need to track every spoons position? It just looks like they spent too much money on a too capable/complex engine and can’t really innovate because of it.

        • TrousersMcPants@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          Play Skyrim and do fus to dah in a tavern or something, having all those physics objects feels amazing. Also being able to walk in a house and steal all the cutlery and junk just feels so immersive for being in the world imo. Not to mention the crafting systems in Fo4 and Starfield using those clutter objects for crafting systems.

      • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        Exactly. As a developer, the complexity of that engine blows me away. It’s a miracle they got as solid as they did honestly. If these critics are developers, they’re either lacking in empathy or they’re the kind of prodigy who cannot even comprehend the inability to think about such insanely complex systems with ease

        • actually@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          Also, having played hundreds of hours of their games, I would be content with the older game engine as long as there was a good story line, and decent mechanics ( not related to the op topic).

          They can make bad games with this engine, for sure , but I do not want them switch out to photo realism to paint over problems .

          It seems to my old self that games would be better if they were a bit ugly, and dangly, to not hide behind all that newness and flashy stuff

        • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          I get that but as a gamer I’m forced to ask why? They went through all this trouble and now they’re unwilling to abandon it while other games are sprinting past them in tech, story, and graphics.

      • Quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Because Bethesda didn’t focus on fixing script bugs in those re-releases, only engine ones. The game logic remains a tangled mess of bugs and the unofficial patches that actually fix things barely needed to change at all to support each new edition.

      • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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        15 hours ago

        People said that but I played the game I’m sure over 100 hours and bugs impacted maybe .2% of my playing time.

      • ripcord@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        For all the complaints about Starfield, being Bethesda-buggy wasn’t really one of them. It was possibly their most polished release.

        • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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          4 hours ago

          On my first playthrough, once I got the quest to find the first space temple it bugged, with the quest marker pointing to a specific place in a planet, but no temple spawning there. I had to start a new game as I didn’t have any saves from before starting that quest. Not fun.

          • ripcord@lemmy.world
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            9 hours ago

            Not saying there weren’t bugs, but the consensus seemed to be that it was the most polished, bug-free title they’ve ever launched.

            Edit: …which is a pretty low bar, I know. But it seemed more inline with the bugs that most “AAA” games tend to have at launch.

  • callouscomic@lemm.ee
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    18 hours ago

    Have they played their own games?

    Bethesda RPGs are fun. But I’d say they are far from “perfectly tuned.” Always found them to be wonky, clunky, bug-riddled.

    When was the last RPG they released that didn’t require tons of patching?

    • UpperBroccoli@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 hours ago

      When was the last RPG they released that didn’t require tons of patching?

      I would have said “that terminator game they made in the early 90s” but that is hardly an RPG :)

    • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      I think he means “perfectly tuned to the way fans want it” which is to say “highly moddable.” Skyrim is kind of the first game in the series that sold really well on platforms other than the PC which strangely brought in a lot of fans who play the vanilla game. But as far as I can remember, the bulk of the longterm fanbase plays on PC and installs tons of mods for the game.

      Sure, there are other games that fans like to mod (Minecraft being a big one) but I can’t think of any other game where fans stack dozens or even hundreds of mods by different authors all on the same game and actually expect it to work. The fact that it does work at all (and fans have created custom programs to merge mods and to carefully tune the loading order) is rather a miracle!

      So this is what I think he means by “perfectly tuned.” A brand new engine would mean putting in a ton of work to support all the different forms of modding fans want to do and in all likelihood would be far less flexible and powerful, leading to modder community outcry.

    • Dippy@beehaw.org
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      15 hours ago

      It was 10 years into playing Skyrim on my 4th medium of playing it that learned the courier wasn’t supposed to be naked. I thought it was a comment on his poverty or something

  • MoonManKipper@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    The problem with the latest Bethesda games has not been the engine. It’s the writing and the design choices

    • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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      4 hours ago

      It’s the writing and the design choices

      I blame Emil Pagliarulo first and foremost. “Design docs? HAHA, that’s for losers!” He’s also the lead writer and no doubt the asshole behind space magic in the game, since he couldn’t put radiation witches in FO4.

    • switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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      19 hours ago

      the writing, yes

      but if their engine is “perfectly tuned” then that means their engine is informing their design

      they can’t make good design choices because they have to work within the limitations of an over-fitted engine

      • MoonManKipper@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        I think that’s a reach - the difference between boring choices and interesting ones isn’t the engine - look at New Vegas and Daggerfall.

        • switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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          10 hours ago

          e.g., starfield would’ve been a very different game had you been able to fly space -> surface, and had there been vehicles to do actual exploring with

          it would’ve completely changed the way the game plays, and opened up new possibilities for design. it also would’ve removed many of the oft-criticized loading screens and made the whole experience flow better.

          but they can’t do any of that, because the engine isn’t good enough to support it.

          sometimes you can’t make a choice because the engine says no

      • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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        18 hours ago

        they can’t make good design choices because they have to work within the limitations of an over-fitted engine

        Maybe that’s why Starfield has become a 50% game, 50% loading screen.

  • switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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    20 hours ago

    josh sawyer has said their engine has the best content creation pipeline he’s worked with, which is probably why they’re reluctant to give it up

    but surely at this point they have to be doing something in the background to move to a different one. i seriously doubt they didn’t try to get space-to-surface flight working, but evidently the engine didn’t let them…which is more or less the same story as every other time they’ve tried to break out of the mold they’ve carved for themselves. it always ends up a janky mess.

    whenever they build out actual new mechanics for the engine, like the settlement building in fo4, or the space flight in starfield, they’re always just grafted on, rather than being interwoven with existing systems.

    • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      The thing that gets me is having the interior of the ships. But that interior doesn’t matter. And if you try to actually RP in your RPG you inevitably get plopped on an airless planet without a suit because of the ship fast travel mechanic. The entire section of stuff there is a complete useless doodad that could be replaced with small cutscenes or static scenes to talk with onboard crew and use upgraded ship things like research stations.

  • warm@kbin.earth
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    19 hours ago

    They just dont want to invest the time to overhaul the engine or start from scratch. Even Call of Duty managed to do this.

    • TexMexBazooka@lemm.ee
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      16 hours ago

      “Even one of the largest and most well funded game franchises in history did this”

      • kerrigan778@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Yeah, because Microsoft/ZeniMax/Bethesda is such a small corporation and Fallout/The Elder Scrolls is such an inconsequential, low budget franchise.

      • warm@kbin.earth
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        15 hours ago

        Call of Duty is known for recycling as much as possible to pump out yearly games, I was actually surprised to hear they convinced management to give them time to rebuild the engine.

        Besides, doesn’t Bethesda Game Studios have more employees than Infinity Ward?

      • vasametropolis@lemm.ee
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        15 hours ago

        Elder Scrolls probably fits this category as well - not as much as Call of Duty but Bethesda probably has amongst the best RPG sales of anyone. They sold a hilarious number of copies of Skyrim alone.