• Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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    1 year ago

    The problem I have with Getting over It is that I really have better things to do with my time.

    Like watching paint dry.

    • Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Absolutely! Is this the new updated Metroid Prime on switch or back when it was on the GameCube?

      I went from Halo to Metroid Prime and was furious at how bad the first person looking was.

      But I was so engrossed by the world and lore that after a few hours, I just accepted it. Absolutely fantastic game.

      • theangryseal@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Oh definitely the one on GameCube. The controls were absurd.

        I haven’t played the new version, but I had just beat it again on GameCube a few months before they surprise dropped it on the switch, so I wasn’t really interested. I thought it was the trilogy when it popped up on my screen and I was so excited, then immediately bummed.

        Been playing Prime 2 on Primehack and that controls perfectly, I just don’t much care for the game. I really want to. It just doesn’t grab me like the first one. That’s coming from a Metroid fanatic who routinely replays all of the side scrollers haha. I just did it again like a month ago.

    • kreekybonez@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I just played through the Prime-hack version on PC, and the mouse + keyboard combo is much more natural for me to enjoy it. Morph ball mode is still a bit difficult to control, but it didn’t bother me so much that I couldn’t still finish the game at 100%

      Updated textures and HUD and widescreen with a custom field of view were also big improvement

  • I’m left handed. I manipulate the mouse (trackball, actually) with my left hand. This means all default controls suck.

    Most games are nice enough to include key-bind customization. This is good! A lot of games (including most AAA games) don’t extend this to menu controls, including reversing the mouse buttons so I get to pinky-click my way though the main menu.

    The best ones are games that feature engines where I can alter the config files and customize my keybinds there. This usually allows me to make it comprehensive.

    Some games dont what to differentiate between numpad arrows and the editing arrows (the island). Locking numlodk helps. I’ll use Autohotkey to lock down numlock, rebind the numpad enter (to differentiate it from the Return key) and to map the numlock, and scroll-lock islands to letters I can rebind.

    Some companies give no fucks, and expect me to use a default controller. Note that controllers are right-handed, so I don’t like them. Again, Autohotkey solves this relatively well, or I choose not to bother with that game.

    It also raises interface questions. In Thief: The Dark Project walk forward (quiet), sneak forward (very quiet) and run forward (loud) were single buttons. A lot of games make sprinting a chord to forward unnecessarily. (It makes more sense when the sprint modifier affects all directional movement, or as per the awesome button in Saints Row, The Third

    I also like a designated grenade button, and will macro select grenade with fire-selected weapon to make one. I may deselect the grenade and select previous weapon in the same macro if I’m feeling fancy. In Left-4-Dead I made heal-other and toss-pills hotkeys to make them second nature.

    So yeah, game controls are wierd, and I think it would serve us all to get in the habit of customizing them exactly as we like, to complain about games with rigid controls or sucky schemes, and praise games that are easy to play and don’t kill us by interface failure. (see Death by Ladder).

    • Basil@lemmings.world
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      1 year ago

      You should get familiar with Steam Input, works for the majority of steam games (and even non-steam if added), you can do some crazy things with it, bind hotkeys to menus, do mode shifts to have a totally different control layout if you’re holding a button, it’s honestly incredible and you can make pretty much any game playable on any controller, even M+KB only games

    • olutukko@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      What the hell man? You use your mouse with a left hand? That sounds like a great way to make the whole gaming experience suck for you. I’m left handed too and I almsot started using mouse with left hand as a kid until my brother pointed out that every public computer and software are made with right handed mouse in mind so I didn:'t do thst switch and god I’m glad I didn’t. I’m using mouse with right hand just as well as I use pen with left hand

      • Quite the opposite. There are ambidextrous trackballs and the number-pad is better for gaming, IMO the WASD region of the main keyboard. I use th3 arrow island either to select weapons or to chord with keys for special purposes.

        Interestingly they make keypads to better organize the left hand of the keyboard, but separate numberpads that include the editing islands are almost unheard of, but I generally use a mechanical keyboard for gaming anyway.

        Curiously, I do use a joystick right-handed, the product of playing flight sims and space sims ( Wing Commander, X-Wing, etc.) on a buddy’s computer, but once I was using mouse and keyboard, I swapped.

        • olutukko@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I mean you make some good points, but being lefty is already so hard I cant imagine configuring every games keybindings, sounds like a lot of work :D it would be interesting to try some leftie setup but I cant really do it with my mouse because of the curvature

      • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        Yes. While this applies to most applications, it’s not consistent between games. Ubisoft games, for instance, are notorious for their menu systems failing notice a system-set button reversal. In those cases I can set the R-button for primary fire / select and the L-button for secondary (Hacker-vision in Watch Dogs 2, for instance, since I aim / use iron-sights with Numpad-5) but any in-game menus still require an unreversible left-click, which I have to either deal with or work around.

  • Hylactor@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    To whom it may concern: Bennett is involved with a new upcoming game called Baby Steps. It looks sort of QWOP-ish. It’s worth watching the trailer if you haven’t.

  • nutt_goblin@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I played this game for the first time last year. I expected it to be a shallow rage game but something about it hit just right as I was recovering from surgery and working through my temporary disability. I think it might be a masterpiece in teaching you how to play through level design - like Mario 1:1 on steroids.

  • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    that game is honestly just a test of how well people understand ballistics, it’s a wonder some people manage to throw things irl