How long have you waited to get it? Was it worth it?

  • verysoft@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    People missed the point of this, its games that you waited for after release, not games you waited to release.

    • glau@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, my intention was to ask more in the spirit of the capital Patient Gamer, as in the community name, instead of just a gamer who is patient. Some good discussions happening here so it’s all good either way.

  • Nailbar@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I turned 40 this year. I pledged for Star Citizen when I was 20-something 🙃

    It’s still my dream-game, so I’m still patiently waiting.

  • oillut@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Starbound. Waited years while it was in development, and my buddies and I just let the hype build and build. When it finally came out, it wasn’t even close to worth it. At the time, it still seemed like something that would eventually get to where we hoped (or at least for the most part), but picking it up every few months/years showed us the dev team’s ideas were great on paper, but they just weren’t capable of implementing any of it well.

    More recently, I’ve seen YouTube docs that have gone into the awful development and bad treatment of young developers who weren’t paid, and fired after they caught on that they never would be.

    On the bright side, it gave my friends and I a new appreciation for how great Terraria is, and why it’s similar features work so well when Starbound’s didn’t

    • simple@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Maaaaan I bought this game on release and it was actually better then than compared to now. Before, you could be “evil” and kill innocent villagers and loot their stuff. The game also wasn’t mission-based like they made it later on in development, the progression was more comparable to Terraria where you just find and craft equipment across planets.

      Then they started limiting what the player could do, railroading them into linear story missions, making progression slower etc. It was a big disappointment, because the game isn’t bad, it’s just built on many bad decisions.

      • hughperman@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Wow, I played it very very early, while they were just starting to introduce the concept of missions at all. It seemed cool then, sad to hear it’s got worse.

      • oillut@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Lol I do remember having more fun when it first came out, assumed that was just the honeymoon period but now I’m not too sure.

        It definitely had more of that Minecraft openness compared to the later “crappy Terraria” pre-built content. Doesn’t help most of the additions we were looking forward to at release ended up falling flat. But yeah, the game isn’t bad, just screams having more potential than it could ever have lived up to

  • late_night@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Sonic adventure for the Dreamcast. It was released in 1998 and I played it for the first time in 2019… and it blew my mind. It’s such a solid game, a really cool environment with amazing camera angles, diverse levels, and a difficulty that’s just right.

    • Mikina@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      It was a game I spent my literal childhood on - I remember having a Dreamcast ever since I was 4 years old (I was born in 1996), and the one game I spend most of my time on was Sonic adventure and Sonic Adventure DX. I was replaying the Sonic Adventure a few months ago, and the game is still crazy good! But it was such a surprisingly different experience than I remember.

  • Gurei@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    The Outer Worlds. Would have been the last game to date that I’d had pre-ordered, but they went Epic exclusive, so I decided to be patient and wait for the Steam release. Year goes by and it releases for Steam, but at original launch price. Decide I’m not willing to pay full price for a game I had to wait extra for.

    Now it’s turned into a game of seeing it go on sale and remarking, “Come on guys, you can do better than that.”

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    1 year ago

    I only buy games on steam or very rarely GOG. I refuse to buy a games that are exclusive to a single platform. I don’t want to pay people to remove my choices. So there’s been a few games I’ve waited to leave their exclusive deals with epic or whatever. Satisfactory is one. They had an epic store exclusive I think for 2 years and then they went to steam. I very much enjoyed the game. I’m still waiting for escape from tarkov to join us on steam.

    Unless I have friends doing multiplayer at this moment, I just waitlist games until they hit $5. And when that happens I buy them. So I have a large game backlog. I don’t anticipate or wait for games. I just wait list and forget and then I have happy surprises during the steam sales.

    I think I had lost seas on my waitlist for 2 years 3 years.

    • 30isthenew29@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      What if something is $6 and it’s never been this cheap for 7 years now? You wait more?

      • jet@hackertalks.com
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        1 year ago

        I’m only human! It’s a rule of thumb! Depends on my emotional state when I see the sale. So yeah I’ve snagged a $6 game sure.

  • Styxie@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    The Witcher 3. I’d been following its development since the Witcher 2, and I loved the games and the books. After 5 years of waiting I knew that it wasn’t likely to live up to my expectations, so I prepared myself for disappointment.

    Then it came out, and it was the best RPG I’d played. Some of the Novigrad story lines went on for too long, but that was my only issue with it. I’ve 100% it three times. Best €30 I ever spent. The DLC was somehow even better than the base game. I have no idea how CDPR managed it.

  • coffinwood@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Almost every game. I just can’t afford most games for the full price so patience isn’t a virtue but a necessity. Currently I’m waiting to play FarCry 6. My old GPU couldn’t handle it, then I got a new one and another game sale happened. But as soon as I’m through with AC Valhalla I might give it a try.

    The only full price PC game I played from release that I can recall was No Man’s Sky (my hot take: it was great from the start). And I got that one gifted.

    The next waiting will be done for Starfield, I think. But that’s more for stability (“ripeness”) and mod situation.

    • fadedmaster@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Just about the same here except for me it’s just that I don’t have the time to play every game I want to. The Steam Deck has helped me to play more and fit a little bit of gaming in here and there. I did get Final Fantasy XVI right at launch and set aside a lot of time to play through it.

      But to answer the OP, probably Dark Souls. I played it a little at a friend’s house years ago when it first came out but never actually bothered to buy it until the end of 2021 when it was on sale through Steam. Immediately played through it, fell in love, then played through the second one. I haven’t played the third yet, but it is on my list.

  • soloner@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I waited a while for sekiro. Finally broke down and got it on sale after it had been on my wishlist for 2 years.

    I found it too challenging, even as a fan of their other games, it just didn’t click. Finally I hit a wall on some enemy who I couldn’t kill and gave up. Sad cuz I really wanted to like it.

  • Ookami38@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Death Stranding. Completely forgot about the game until I got it in humble monthly, and… Damn it was worth playing. In retrospective, I’d have been happy dropping 60 on it. I thought going in it’d be boring gameplay for a weird story, but the gameplay was actually REALLY FUN and the story was weord.

    • habanhero
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      1 year ago

      +1. It’s one of those games that got better overtime. When it came out in 2019 there were people like, “Really? A hiking / Amazon Prime simulator?”

      But after the Pandemic, the isolation and theme of yearning connections really hit home, and the entire design and philosophy just clicked and worked for me. I started appreciate everything about the game. I think Hideo Kojima even said he’s going to try and not predict the future in Death Stranding 2 😄

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I waited four years for breath of the wild, and when I finally played it, it was like I was playing an entire new genre. Like I was playing ocarina of time for the first time and the world seemed endlessly exciting. Except this time I could climb mountains and paraglide.

      • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Oh awesome. Yeah I’m so glad I waited, because the game seemed, in addition to everything I mentioned just so smooth when I finally played it. I would just run in a direction for easily like 15 minutes and then just climb a mountain for another 15 minutes. After 30 minutes of that" game time," I was as satisfied with the experiences I was with almost any other game haha, even though I had done basically nothing. It’s just pretty and fun and engaging.

  • Izzy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I played Destiny 2 when it came out, but then they kept releasing more and more DLC and expansions I didn’t feel like buying for how little content there was. My plan was to simply wait until the entirety of the game was released so I could buy the rest of everything in a single purchase and play it all.

    I think I heard recently they have been actually removing old content so this plan no longer makes sense.

    • Rokk@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Yea, the download size was getting too big (or they couldn’t be bothered QA-ing new gear with old content) so they started deleting old stuff.

      Means if you start playing now you can’t play the story from the beginning which seems pretty terrible to me.

  • XTL@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Fallouts. I knew they existed for, I don’t even know, decades? I finally got New Vegas some years back (and others later) and it really is the greatest game ever made. I don’t know why I waited.

    • MyOtherCarIsEpona@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It’s actually great that you started with New Vegas. This can help give you perspective about why Black Isle/Obsidian understands the IP so much better than Bethesda does. I truly consider 3 and 4 to have great moments, but are overall trash when you compare them to 2 and New Vegas.

      I really like Bethesda a lot as a publisher (Doom/Eternal, Hi-Fi Rush) but I really wish people would stop buying the games they develop until they figure some things out.

      • Malta Soron@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        I was planning to start a full replay of FO1-2-3-NV this week, but man, those games have not aged well presentation-wise. I ended up installing only F:NV with the Viva New Vegas modlist; I tried adding visual mods, but the game kept crashing. But at least I’ve got a stable version of the best game of the series now.

        It would be nice if someone made a remaster of FO1 and 2 like they did with Baldur’s Gate 1 and 2. I don’t mind the top-down perspective, buv i would like some more graphical fidelity and UI improvements.

        • BEZORP@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          I relayed 1 and 2 maybe a decade ago now, and I remember there were some fan patches that made them much more user friendly. Higher resolutions and mouse scrolling in inventory being the enhancements I remember most.

          I do have some nostalgia for to these games, so my tolerance for old school inconvenience is likely higher.

  • GreneArwe@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    Red Dead Redemption 1. Played it for the first time about a year ago. I knew how it ended, but it was still worth the wait to experience everything myself.

  • gk99@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Probably Duke Nukem Forever. I told myself that if it were ever $1, I’d buy it.

    Then it was in the $1 tier of a Humble Bundle. Gonna be honest, still not really worth it, I don’t think. Never finished it, didn’t really think it was that fun.