Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 07:36:56 AMI remember bungie hyping up marine driving AI before Reach coming out, claiming that you'd be able to sit on a gun and let the marines drive.Apparently, at least one spartan didn't get the memo...I don't understand why they can't copy over the Covenant AI code for driving and change the faction allegiance. Can't be that hard, right?Covenant AI are just as bad at driving, it's just that, IIRC, they're spawned away from Covenant infantry to avoid splattering in most cases. If you play Firefight on Reach's Corvette and Beachead maps, you can see the Wraiths splatter about 20 friendly units in a single game. The reason you don't see Elites splattering each other is (in Halo 1 at least), they gave them a smaller hitbox for vehicles, so Ghosts could cruise over them without getting splattered, despite being taller than the Master Chief and Marines, who can't avoid it, even by crouching. On Assault on the Control room, the first Wraith would sometimes teamkill that group of Jackals that hang around the Outcrop behind it. Kat's driving was fucking ridiculous. Every fails of the Weak episode, you'd see somebody make the mistake of operating the Gunner seat on Tip of the Spear, and immediately be punished harder than missing a Rest with Jigglypuff on Super Smash Bros.
I remember bungie hyping up marine driving AI before Reach coming out, claiming that you'd be able to sit on a gun and let the marines drive.Apparently, at least one spartan didn't get the memo...I don't understand why they can't copy over the Covenant AI code for driving and change the faction allegiance. Can't be that hard, right?
huh. I seem to remember the prowlers and wraiths in Halo 3 generally acting pretty well. But, considering that Halo 5 has marines, covenant and prometheans as multiplayer enemies, I'm expecting to have a vast improvement on the AI.I'm curious as to whether they'll go the Destiny route with boss battles and make bigger versions of existing enemies with more health and a fancy name or give them some new mechanics to use.
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 07:58:58 AMhuh. I seem to remember the prowlers and wraiths in Halo 3 generally acting pretty well. But, considering that Halo 5 has marines, covenant and prometheans as multiplayer enemies, I'm expecting to have a vast improvement on the AI.I'm curious as to whether they'll go the Destiny route with boss battles and make bigger versions of existing enemies with more health and a fancy name or give them some new mechanics to use.One would hope that after 14 years of Halo, they'd be smart enough to make friendly AI that isn't Marathon BOB Tier. They're having bosses now? Sounds cool, especially given how much the Halo 3 scarabs were to fight against the first few times. If that's the case, I'm hoping for the bosses to have some variety, whilst still keeping within the realm of Halo's "realism." Presumably we'll be battling some Lekgolo variants, but I'm curious to see what else they come up with.
Should've played 2
Quote from: CK97 on August 20, 2015, 01:01:46 AMShould've played 2>not playing games in sequencemadman
Quote from: Verbatim on August 20, 2015, 09:03:20 AMQuote from: CK97 on August 20, 2015, 01:01:46 AMShould've played 2>not playing games in sequencemadmanI'm the same way, but my point was that 2 is better than CE so I didn't want your impression of the series to be from playing one of the weaker games (IMO).
Quote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.
Quote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.
Quote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful types
Quote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.
IMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurt
Oh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 05:15:36 AMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.Actually, not really. Again, fell into the trap. The Forerunners only ever ended up firing the Halos because they got into a row with the Precursors who decided that humanity would be the inheritors of the mantle. Cue a good long millenia later when the flood return and the rest is history.I count 3, if not 4 instances in the series alone.1. Precursors giving the mantle to Humanity and the Forerunners getting all pissy about it, killing the milky way Precursors2. Humanity aggressively expanding but actually fleeing the Flood, dunked on by the Forerunners, and, expressly taken an interest in by the Flood-Precursors3.Post-Array activation, Humanity starting up again as delightful little flowers before the big bad bully on the block got all pissy when their leaders learned that Humans weren't relics but in fact, Reclaimers.Special snowflake syndrome, that is.
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:46:13 AMOh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions*waves*
Quote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:47:04 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:46:13 AMOh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions*waves**waves back*
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:52:08 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:47:04 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:46:13 AMOh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions*waves**waves back*I have them all tooo
Quote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:55:31 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:52:08 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:47:04 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:46:13 AMOh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions*waves**waves back*I have them all toooI'm considering selling my Halo 3 and Reach ones because they suck I saw both of the legendaries to buy for £70 total.Tempting offer, aside from the fact I have nowhere to put the statues.
Quote from: on August 20, 2015, 10:45:42 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 05:15:36 AMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.Actually, not really. Again, fell into the trap. The Forerunners only ever ended up firing the Halos because they got into a row with the Precursors who decided that humanity would be the inheritors of the mantle. Cue a good long millenia later when the flood return and the rest is history.I count 3, if not 4 instances in the series alone.1. Precursors giving the mantle to Humanity and the Forerunners getting all pissy about it, killing the milky way Precursors2. Humanity aggressively expanding but actually fleeing the Flood, dunked on by the Forerunners, and, expressly taken an interest in by the Flood-Precursors3.Post-Array activation, Humanity starting up again as delightful little flowers before the big bad bully on the block got all pissy when their leaders learned that Humans weren't relics but in fact, Reclaimers.Special snowflake syndrome, that is.I more meant humans being BTFO by the forerunners after their war and being reduced to cavemen. Anyway;2- Not really humans fault. The Precursors created the flood as a weapon against the forerunners. Humanity found it first and got destroyed by it.3- The Primordial took an interest because he believed the Humans had found a cure. It is strongly implied this was a lie and there was no cure, but either way, the Primordial took an interest because he was decieved. Not because humans r specialTo be honest, a lot of the forerunner saga stuff had to be written to explain the status quo that bungie enforced in their reign with humans r special. Which is a shame, I'm more of a fan of when someting occurs randomly. I preferred the idea of the flood as this big intergalactic.. thing that had consumed multiple galaxy like the they did the Forerunners before the Forerunner saga solidified the precursors.
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:58:59 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:55:31 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:52:08 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:47:04 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:46:13 AMOh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions*waves**waves back*I have them all toooI'm considering selling my Halo 3 and Reach ones because they suck I saw both of the legendaries to buy for £70 total.Tempting offer, aside from the fact I have nowhere to put the statues.Yeah, the Halo 3 one is kinda bad Well, if they're in good condition, I'd say get them <_<
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:51:37 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 10:45:42 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 05:15:36 AMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.Actually, not really. Again, fell into the trap. The Forerunners only ever ended up firing the Halos because they got into a row with the Precursors who decided that humanity would be the inheritors of the mantle. Cue a good long millenia later when the flood return and the rest is history.I count 3, if not 4 instances in the series alone.1. Precursors giving the mantle to Humanity and the Forerunners getting all pissy about it, killing the milky way Precursors2. Humanity aggressively expanding but actually fleeing the Flood, dunked on by the Forerunners, and, expressly taken an interest in by the Flood-Precursors3.Post-Array activation, Humanity starting up again as delightful little flowers before the big bad bully on the block got all pissy when their leaders learned that Humans weren't relics but in fact, Reclaimers.Special snowflake syndrome, that is.I more meant humans being BTFO by the forerunners after their war and being reduced to cavemen. Anyway;2- Not really humans fault. The Precursors created the flood as a weapon against the forerunners. Humanity found it first and got destroyed by it.3- The Primordial took an interest because he believed the Humans had found a cure. It is strongly implied this was a lie and there was no cure, but either way, the Primordial took an interest because he was decieved. Not because humans r specialTo be honest, a lot of the forerunner saga stuff had to be written to explain the status quo that bungie enforced in their reign with humans r special. Which is a shame, I'm more of a fan of when someting occurs randomly. I preferred the idea of the flood as this big intergalactic.. thing that had consumed multiple galaxy like the they did the Forerunners before the Forerunner saga solidified the precursors.Same here. They seemed more threatening as an advanced evolutionary lifeform on their own. Imagine that. A parasite that was so hyper evolved it was operating on galactic scale, enough to give even the Forerunners a kick to the dick.Over what they are now, basically a tool just like the Reapers.
Quote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 11:01:07 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:58:59 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:55:31 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:52:08 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:47:04 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:46:13 AMOh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions*waves**waves back*I have them all toooI'm considering selling my Halo 3 and Reach ones because they suck I saw both of the legendaries to buy for £70 total.Tempting offer, aside from the fact I have nowhere to put the statues.Yeah, the Halo 3 one is kinda bad Well, if they're in good condition, I'd say get them <_<I just meant Halo 3 and Reach are bad. I love the beastarium and Halsey's Journal. Wish I could get the Pink Mist editiion of Halo 5, though...
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 11:01:07 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:58:59 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:55:31 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:52:08 AMQuote from: True Turquoise on August 20, 2015, 10:47:04 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:46:13 AMOh yeah, I have all Halo limited editions*waves**waves back*I have them all toooI'm considering selling my Halo 3 and Reach ones because they suck I saw both of the legendaries to buy for £70 total.Tempting offer, aside from the fact I have nowhere to put the statues.Yeah, the Halo 3 one is kinda bad Well, if they're in good condition, I'd say get them <_<I just meant Halo 3 and Reach are bad. I love the beastarium and Halsey's Journal. Wish I could get the Pink Mist editiion of Halo 5, though...somuchmoneythough
Quote from: on August 20, 2015, 11:02:50 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:51:37 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 10:45:42 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 05:15:36 AMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.Actually, not really. Again, fell into the trap. The Forerunners only ever ended up firing the Halos because they got into a row with the Precursors who decided that humanity would be the inheritors of the mantle. Cue a good long millenia later when the flood return and the rest is history.I count 3, if not 4 instances in the series alone.1. Precursors giving the mantle to Humanity and the Forerunners getting all pissy about it, killing the milky way Precursors2. Humanity aggressively expanding but actually fleeing the Flood, dunked on by the Forerunners, and, expressly taken an interest in by the Flood-Precursors3.Post-Array activation, Humanity starting up again as delightful little flowers before the big bad bully on the block got all pissy when their leaders learned that Humans weren't relics but in fact, Reclaimers.Special snowflake syndrome, that is.I more meant humans being BTFO by the forerunners after their war and being reduced to cavemen. Anyway;2- Not really humans fault. The Precursors created the flood as a weapon against the forerunners. Humanity found it first and got destroyed by it.3- The Primordial took an interest because he believed the Humans had found a cure. It is strongly implied this was a lie and there was no cure, but either way, the Primordial took an interest because he was decieved. Not because humans r specialTo be honest, a lot of the forerunner saga stuff had to be written to explain the status quo that bungie enforced in their reign with humans r special. Which is a shame, I'm more of a fan of when someting occurs randomly. I preferred the idea of the flood as this big intergalactic.. thing that had consumed multiple galaxy like the they did the Forerunners before the Forerunner saga solidified the precursors.Same here. They seemed more threatening as an advanced evolutionary lifeform on their own. Imagine that. A parasite that was so hyper evolved it was operating on galactic scale, enough to give even the Forerunners a kick to the dick.Over what they are now, basically a tool just like the Reapers.Yeh. Honestly, I'm still not sure about the interperetation of the forerunners. It's cool, but seems... Can't put my finger on it, but it doesn't seem right. Maybe it's just the fact I don't like having ancient empires who left behind artifacts for all the new empires to squabble over trope. Seems pretty lazy when that's your motivation for political stuff and wars. I mean, I like it in moderation. There were a few planets in ME with the descriptions that pre-prothean empires reigned there, but that's it. We don't see them as a major thing, but they provide depth to the universe by reinforcing that the current civilisations and the protheans aren't the only ones that have existed.All that said, bungie's original intention; that the forerunners were humans and the flood an experiment gone wrong, is even more boring, IMO.
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 11:12:38 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 11:02:50 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:51:37 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 10:45:42 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 05:15:36 AMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.Actually, not really. Again, fell into the trap. The Forerunners only ever ended up firing the Halos because they got into a row with the Precursors who decided that humanity would be the inheritors of the mantle. Cue a good long millenia later when the flood return and the rest is history.I count 3, if not 4 instances in the series alone.1. Precursors giving the mantle to Humanity and the Forerunners getting all pissy about it, killing the milky way Precursors2. Humanity aggressively expanding but actually fleeing the Flood, dunked on by the Forerunners, and, expressly taken an interest in by the Flood-Precursors3.Post-Array activation, Humanity starting up again as delightful little flowers before the big bad bully on the block got all pissy when their leaders learned that Humans weren't relics but in fact, Reclaimers.Special snowflake syndrome, that is.I more meant humans being BTFO by the forerunners after their war and being reduced to cavemen. Anyway;2- Not really humans fault. The Precursors created the flood as a weapon against the forerunners. Humanity found it first and got destroyed by it.3- The Primordial took an interest because he believed the Humans had found a cure. It is strongly implied this was a lie and there was no cure, but either way, the Primordial took an interest because he was decieved. Not because humans r specialTo be honest, a lot of the forerunner saga stuff had to be written to explain the status quo that bungie enforced in their reign with humans r special. Which is a shame, I'm more of a fan of when someting occurs randomly. I preferred the idea of the flood as this big intergalactic.. thing that had consumed multiple galaxy like the they did the Forerunners before the Forerunner saga solidified the precursors.Same here. They seemed more threatening as an advanced evolutionary lifeform on their own. Imagine that. A parasite that was so hyper evolved it was operating on galactic scale, enough to give even the Forerunners a kick to the dick.Over what they are now, basically a tool just like the Reapers.Yeh. Honestly, I'm still not sure about the interperetation of the forerunners. It's cool, but seems... Can't put my finger on it, but it doesn't seem right. Maybe it's just the fact I don't like having ancient empires who left behind artifacts for all the new empires to squabble over trope. Seems pretty lazy when that's your motivation for political stuff and wars. I mean, I like it in moderation. There were a few planets in ME with the descriptions that pre-prothean empires reigned there, but that's it. We don't see them as a major thing, but they provide depth to the universe by reinforcing that the current civilisations and the protheans aren't the only ones that have existed.All that said, bungie's original intention; that the forerunners were humans and the flood an experiment gone wrong, is even more boring, IMO.Exactly the same here. I was put off by the ancient empires thing. Not only for humanity but for everybody else too. I always liked the original vibe they set off, which is now at this point, tarnished.They were alone in their advancements in the galaxy. No other species was going as fast as them. So, obviously, they were caretakers. Then they bumped into the Flood, extra-galactic origin, and waged war, utterly, completely lost, and made the ultimate sacrifice for everybody yet to come, if anything, to buy them some time.Now I don't see automated machines, the only thing left after the Forerunners hit the killswitch, building the portal to the ark on africa as early man watched them in wonder.I see politics and, to be honest, a cunt of a species.Alas, the dangers of "too much information."
Combat Evolved is one of the strongest entries, in regards to it's story. Though, granted, not as good as Halo 2, ODST or Halo 4.
Quote from: on August 20, 2015, 11:38:48 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 11:12:38 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 11:02:50 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:51:37 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 10:45:42 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 05:15:36 AMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.Actually, not really. Again, fell into the trap. The Forerunners only ever ended up firing the Halos because they got into a row with the Precursors who decided that humanity would be the inheritors of the mantle. Cue a good long millenia later when the flood return and the rest is history.I count 3, if not 4 instances in the series alone.1. Precursors giving the mantle to Humanity and the Forerunners getting all pissy about it, killing the milky way Precursors2. Humanity aggressively expanding but actually fleeing the Flood, dunked on by the Forerunners, and, expressly taken an interest in by the Flood-Precursors3.Post-Array activation, Humanity starting up again as delightful little flowers before the big bad bully on the block got all pissy when their leaders learned that Humans weren't relics but in fact, Reclaimers.Special snowflake syndrome, that is.I more meant humans being BTFO by the forerunners after their war and being reduced to cavemen. Anyway;2- Not really humans fault. The Precursors created the flood as a weapon against the forerunners. Humanity found it first and got destroyed by it.3- The Primordial took an interest because he believed the Humans had found a cure. It is strongly implied this was a lie and there was no cure, but either way, the Primordial took an interest because he was decieved. Not because humans r specialTo be honest, a lot of the forerunner saga stuff had to be written to explain the status quo that bungie enforced in their reign with humans r special. Which is a shame, I'm more of a fan of when someting occurs randomly. I preferred the idea of the flood as this big intergalactic.. thing that had consumed multiple galaxy like the they did the Forerunners before the Forerunner saga solidified the precursors.Same here. They seemed more threatening as an advanced evolutionary lifeform on their own. Imagine that. A parasite that was so hyper evolved it was operating on galactic scale, enough to give even the Forerunners a kick to the dick.Over what they are now, basically a tool just like the Reapers.Yeh. Honestly, I'm still not sure about the interperetation of the forerunners. It's cool, but seems... Can't put my finger on it, but it doesn't seem right. Maybe it's just the fact I don't like having ancient empires who left behind artifacts for all the new empires to squabble over trope. Seems pretty lazy when that's your motivation for political stuff and wars. I mean, I like it in moderation. There were a few planets in ME with the descriptions that pre-prothean empires reigned there, but that's it. We don't see them as a major thing, but they provide depth to the universe by reinforcing that the current civilisations and the protheans aren't the only ones that have existed.All that said, bungie's original intention; that the forerunners were humans and the flood an experiment gone wrong, is even more boring, IMO.Exactly the same here. I was put off by the ancient empires thing. Not only for humanity but for everybody else too. I always liked the original vibe they set off, which is now at this point, tarnished.They were alone in their advancements in the galaxy. No other species was going as fast as them. So, obviously, they were caretakers. Then they bumped into the Flood, extra-galactic origin, and waged war, utterly, completely lost, and made the ultimate sacrifice for everybody yet to come, if anything, to buy them some time.Now I don't see automated machines, the only thing left after the Forerunners hit the killswitch, building the portal to the ark on africa as early man watched them in wonder.I see politics and, to be honest, a cunt of a species.Alas, the dangers of "too much information."I find the inter-rate politics fascinating, honestly. But the series had to get back round to the Forerunners eventually, you can't keep a plot of human vs alien forever, lest it get stale. Despite my own personal distaste for having an ancient species+artifacts in the first place, I think Halo 5 is handling it really well.
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 11:48:21 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 11:38:48 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 11:12:38 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 11:02:50 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:51:37 AMQuote from: on August 20, 2015, 10:45:42 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 05:15:36 AMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:49:37 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:42:16 PMQuote from: on August 19, 2015, 07:30:25 PMQuote from: ねこ on August 19, 2015, 07:19:30 PMIMO I would realistically expect the aliens to be chosen by the forerunners, and humanity would have been attacking them because muh butthurtActually, that would have been an original idea. I notice a trend in sci-fi these days. Humanity always seems to land as "muh chosen ones" in some form or another. Portrayed as inherently "good" or "okay," or, "worthy."Mass Effect was another series guilty of falling into that gay ass cliche of a trap as well.I was actually thinking this it's always the good ole' humanity that saves the day with kindness and honesty, tbh i would see humanity as the greedy powerful typesLike I said. "Muh chosen ones" complex.In Halo, in all instances in the lore, humanity had apparently done nothing wrong and was seemingly portrayed as the small kid on the block while everybody else was the big bad bullies to them.And in Mass Effect, especially in 3 where shit became big time Earth centric, Humanity got themselves flagged as genetically superior by the Reapers and became the prime conversion target.I don't think I've ever played a game or read a book where Humanity didn't have some sort of pivotal central role because of some special innate and invisible quality.And it's kinda gay, the more I spot it frankly.Yeh. Bungie kind of started that trend in games. In fairness, humanity got fucked over by the forerunners before the firing of the array. But I basically rewrote half my own thing when I realise I was falling into this trap. Then again, my human faction only really got powerful because they arrived in the middle of a war and ended up ring the influencing factor for one side.Actually, not really. Again, fell into the trap. The Forerunners only ever ended up firing the Halos because they got into a row with the Precursors who decided that humanity would be the inheritors of the mantle. Cue a good long millenia later when the flood return and the rest is history.I count 3, if not 4 instances in the series alone.1. Precursors giving the mantle to Humanity and the Forerunners getting all pissy about it, killing the milky way Precursors2. Humanity aggressively expanding but actually fleeing the Flood, dunked on by the Forerunners, and, expressly taken an interest in by the Flood-Precursors3.Post-Array activation, Humanity starting up again as delightful little flowers before the big bad bully on the block got all pissy when their leaders learned that Humans weren't relics but in fact, Reclaimers.Special snowflake syndrome, that is.I more meant humans being BTFO by the forerunners after their war and being reduced to cavemen. Anyway;2- Not really humans fault. The Precursors created the flood as a weapon against the forerunners. Humanity found it first and got destroyed by it.3- The Primordial took an interest because he believed the Humans had found a cure. It is strongly implied this was a lie and there was no cure, but either way, the Primordial took an interest because he was decieved. Not because humans r specialTo be honest, a lot of the forerunner saga stuff had to be written to explain the status quo that bungie enforced in their reign with humans r special. Which is a shame, I'm more of a fan of when someting occurs randomly. I preferred the idea of the flood as this big intergalactic.. thing that had consumed multiple galaxy like the they did the Forerunners before the Forerunner saga solidified the precursors.Same here. They seemed more threatening as an advanced evolutionary lifeform on their own. Imagine that. A parasite that was so hyper evolved it was operating on galactic scale, enough to give even the Forerunners a kick to the dick.Over what they are now, basically a tool just like the Reapers.Yeh. Honestly, I'm still not sure about the interperetation of the forerunners. It's cool, but seems... Can't put my finger on it, but it doesn't seem right. Maybe it's just the fact I don't like having ancient empires who left behind artifacts for all the new empires to squabble over trope. Seems pretty lazy when that's your motivation for political stuff and wars. I mean, I like it in moderation. There were a few planets in ME with the descriptions that pre-prothean empires reigned there, but that's it. We don't see them as a major thing, but they provide depth to the universe by reinforcing that the current civilisations and the protheans aren't the only ones that have existed.All that said, bungie's original intention; that the forerunners were humans and the flood an experiment gone wrong, is even more boring, IMO.Exactly the same here. I was put off by the ancient empires thing. Not only for humanity but for everybody else too. I always liked the original vibe they set off, which is now at this point, tarnished.They were alone in their advancements in the galaxy. No other species was going as fast as them. So, obviously, they were caretakers. Then they bumped into the Flood, extra-galactic origin, and waged war, utterly, completely lost, and made the ultimate sacrifice for everybody yet to come, if anything, to buy them some time.Now I don't see automated machines, the only thing left after the Forerunners hit the killswitch, building the portal to the ark on africa as early man watched them in wonder.I see politics and, to be honest, a cunt of a species.Alas, the dangers of "too much information."I find the inter-rate politics fascinating, honestly. But the series had to get back round to the Forerunners eventually, you can't keep a plot of human vs alien forever, lest it get stale. Despite my own personal distaste for having an ancient species+artifacts in the first place, I think Halo 5 is handling it really well.The one thing that puts me off is the fact that we're actually facing Forerunners now. It doesn't seem feasible, especially with their engineering feats and capabilities. I'd have preffered if things related to forerunners stayed automated to their machinery.And what really gets me iffy is the fact that now, for some apparent reason, the forerunners get a nerf. Forerunner aircraft getting taken out by homing rockets?Simple ballistics? Battlesuits and hardlight getting demolished by bullets?Really? Come on now. The hell happened to all that powerful engineering?
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 20, 2015, 10:34:18 AMCombat Evolved is one of the strongest entries, in regards to it's story. Though, granted, not as good as Halo 2, ODST or Halo 4.Then it's not one of the strongest entries then is it?And no, even Halo 3's story was more powerful. Halo 1's was shallow as shit. Halo 2 is the one that basically made everything what it is.