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[-] Sacha@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, I'm not a massive scifi fan - I tend to like the diversity it offers but if you don't offer it I'm like. "Isn't this just a happier cyberpunk setting?" Whoch I was interested in the cyberpunk game, i followed the development quite closely. But the more I heard about it nearing release, the more suspicious i got of it and I never bought it pre-ordered it and even suggested to my super hyped friend to cancel his pre-order. He didn't and was sups3rdisspppitnrd with the game. Everyone was and I was kind of like "were none of you paying attention to the development? The red flags were the size of Mars"

Bethesda is kind of turning into the safe, mid game company ala Nintendo. And Bethesda does have pretty buggy games at launch. Skyrim is still buggy years later. Granted Bethesda has fixed most of the game breaking bugs over the years. (Though people still consider the unofficial patch to be mandatory due to the state of the game at the launch. The thing is, the unofficial patch is not mandatory. However, so many other mods require it anyway.) Most of the bugs that are left are just engine related bugs since they are still using their 10+ year old engine on modern technology that it was never supposed to work on. Starfield is promised to have aco pletely new engine, and we know that this game is just testing it out. And all the improvements will go into ES6. I expect Starfield to be more broken on launch than Fallout 76.

[-] Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 year ago

Ok, so I'm starting here:

Most of the bugs that are left are just engine related bugs since they are still using their 10+ year old engine on modern technology that it was never supposed to work on. Starfield is promised to have aco pletely new engine, and we know that this game is just testing it out.

That's not how engines work. They're a collection of tools that all work together, and they can all be updated over time. The creation engine that was used in FO4 likely has none (or very little) of the code left from when it was called Gamebryo. For example, Unreal Engine 5 is built on top of every UE before it. For some reason people call the creation engine 10 years old but UE5 modern. Starfield is still using the creation engine, they're just calling it Creation Engine 2 now, and somehow people think that means it's an "entirely new" engine. It isn't. It's updated, but it was for every game before too. People in the internet ignorant of game/software development have been saying they need a new engine though, so they just finally added the 2 and they think it is a new engine.

(Sorry for the rant. This annoys me so much. The engine is nit the reason for almost any of the bugs and it wasn't "designed" to not run on modern hardware.)

As for sci-fi, I don't think it's just happy cyberpunk. For example, Firefly is more of a cowboy show than anything. Usually it's used, like fantasy, to distance ourselves from issues being discussed so we can examine the without bias. This works even better with fantasy sci-fi I think, because it can use alians as an allegory for race or other things, but hard sci-fi can be more Immersive. The Expanse is great as using it's setting for this.

Also, Cyberpunk is actually pretty good now. If it goes on sale, I'd say it's worth picking up. It's not as good as I was hoping with the hype before launch, but it is a good game if you go in without that baggage.

this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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