• otacon239@feddit.de
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    6 months ago

    There is a puzzle in the original Portal that you can solve by stacking up a bunch of cameras. For the longest time, I had always done this and never attempted to properly solve the puzzle.

        • clickyello@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          how did you learn this run? I love portal and it looks like a real fun run but I’ve never speedran anything before and don’t even know where to start.

          • A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.worldM
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            6 months ago

            (TL;DR): Start by playing/replaying casually, eventually you’ll feel like you can beat it in 1 sitting. Time yourself, and then try to beat your time. As you get more and more comfortable, search for tutorials and incorporate more and more tricks/glitches in your runs. Eventually you’ll have a trick for each chamber, and your runs will look like mine.

            It started with me just replaying the game occasionally, and after a year or two I thought hey, it’s pretty short, let’s just see if I can beat the whole thing in one sitting.

            My first run took several hours because I didn’t have the solutions memorized lol. The next day I decided to time it, and since a lot of the solutions were fresh in my memory it only took ~2hrs. So I just kept telling myself “I can do it faster than that” and I kept doing it again and again until it only took me about 40mins.

            At some point I looked up speedruns and found Noircat’s run at GDQ, and it blew me away. I wanted to be able to do that too, so I watched a bunch of tutorials and started learning some tricks (this was one of them, can’t find the others… these days we have a Google doc). I started out with just a couple, but they all took a massive chunk out of my final time. After a lot of learning and practice I had a trick for nearly every chamber, which got my time down to ~20 minutes. After that, it was a process of watching other people’s runs and saying “I could probably pull off that trick / learn that glitch” and just replacing old strategies with new ones.

  • Cracks_InTheWalls@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    As someone who rescued Micah by immediately shooting the Sherriff of Strawberry and his buddies in the face, much to my sibling’s utter shock when they were letting me try RDR2 the first time, I’d say the reverse is also true.

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Oh that’s nice that they allow that. I really hate in games where I go from dominating everyone that dares oppose me to a cutscene where my character gives up because a few people are pointing guns at me. Two minutes ago more people were not just pointing their guns at me but also shooting them.

  • Dasnap@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Immersive sim progression options:

    • Pick a lock
    • Hack a computer
    • Climb up to an air duct
    • Genocide
  • BigBananaDealer@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    reminds me of the fallout 3 glitch to get some dev kit weapon or something

    stack a bunch of 5mm boxes next to a fence and jump over it, theres a chest or something that has something the player was not meant to get

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      Yeah, the issue is it isn’t intended for you to do things like that. An Immersive simulator expects you to be able to use boxes or whatever else is in the world to solve issues in immergent ways. Fallout, and any Bethesda game really, doesn’t really do this. You are expected to follow the set out rules. You can take any path and go in any order, but you are supposed to engage with it in the ways they designed.

  • payasson@jlai.lu
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    6 months ago

    can someone explain to me what is this “rule” I see a lot in posts titles? sometimes mixed with other words? I’m having a hard time to understand its meaning

      • VaultBoyNewVegas@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I look for sneaky and if there’s isn’t one try to create a sneaky route, fuck that up and alert everyone then kill all enemies. First time I played Human Revolution I took the tranq gun and went through vents. Came out of the vents and got seen straight away and then had to use a tranq gun with everyone swarming at me. I do the same shit in dishonored too, try to be stealthy, usually fuck it up at first then go on a killing spree. Ironically I love stealth games and I’ve been playing them for years and have found memories of Splinter Cell and MGS.

  • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    That and is there enough “other stuff” going on in the game to ignore the plot completely and just go do that instead for 100 hours?

      • frezik@midwest.social
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        6 months ago

        They had an article about rating games based on how soon you see the first crate. Developers at the time used to always fill space with crates.

        Doom failed because there were barrels in the opening scene, and barrels are just round crates.

    • Fitzsimmons@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 months ago

      And he’s right! It might not be as good as the games that came before it or after it but that bar is so high that it can still be a great game despite it

      • WldFyre@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        To each their own! I was more poking fun at his huge DS2 video where he argued that all the features/gameplay elements most people consider bad are brilliant and good, actually. It was such a bizarre, weird video compared to what I’d expected from his previous videos that I nearly got whiplash watching it lol

  • deadcade@lemmy.deadca.de
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    6 months ago

    Surprising that Boneworks wasn’t mentioned. The whole game is physics based puzzles, meaning you can either solve them, or stack a couple boxes and jump really high. These types of solutions are encouraged in the game, and there’s a couple puzzles I’ve never even solved because the walls were too low.

    • SkyezOpen@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I’m not a fan of puzzle games but boneworks was genuinely pretty fun. I remember I spent 30 minutes or so trying to climb that stupid giant orb that rotated.