Even when the net was in its infancy we had to discover content I'm games on our own. Could you imaging a game like destiny without tutorials and videos showing you everything there is to do in the game.
Destiny would seem 10 times larger than it is. People would interact. We'd always be looking for groups in game and asking people where they got their gear.
It would be a place of constant discovery. There would still be mystery to the game which to me is what is currently lacking.
With all the information we have access to we can look up and complete content that would take us months without the net.
English
#Gaming
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5 답변
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1 답변I used to play games where you had to type your actions on a command prompt - like the good ol' days of DOS. Imagine this: >>Start Destiny >>Go to bounty >>Get bounty 1-6 >>Teleport to Mars >>N,N,N,E,E,N,E (Directions) >>Fight cabal >>Pickup glimmer >>Pickup engram
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2 답변I remember bleeding, blistered hands because of TMNT: The Arcade game on the NES. Such wonderfully painful memories...
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작성자: tyzhev 11/10/2015 1:00:58 AMI have a close experience to that . When I was younger (I'm only 17) , we didn't have internet. We had a GameCube and a ps2 . I remember unlocking mew 2 in super smash bros melee without a guide . Also beat almost every game I had without Internet. Some games I had beat a few times because I had no memory card yet. I just had a family of gamer's.
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3 답변I'll try to put this in perspective... I was 8 years old when Star Wars came out... So, yeah, I remember all that. We had the same stuff then that we do now, it was just slower. We had real life friends and we'd ride our bikes to the store because they had stand up arcade games. Each store had different games so you'd ride around from store to store to play the newest ones. This was back before people had the idea to put them all in one place at an "Arcade". Finding out about new games was always word of mouth. "Hey, I hear 7-11 has Asteroids Deluxe now... There's a shield button!" Tips and tricks was the same, you'd learn by watching other people play. If someone was on a machine, you'd reserve your place in line by stacking a quarter on the glass. Think like an in-person Twitch stream... Of course there were gaming magazines too. Somewhere I think I still have a stack of EGM from the early 80s. Marvel had their own comic book style magazine called "Blip". There were even paperback books about how to beat Pac-Man or real world puzzles like Rubik's Cube. So all the pieces we enjoy now were still there, it was just on a 1 to 3 month delay.
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12 답변작성자: msubobcats87 11/9/2015 11:29:23 PMup - up - down - down - left - right - left - right - b - a - select - start = WOO HOO! 30 lives on Contra! Thank you Nintendo Power (the magazine)!