I was watching LGR’s Unreal Tournament 2004 video and in terms of amount of available content and the sheer size and scale of the maps, it makes the multiplayer of every single Halo game on the 360 look quaint by comparison, and UT2k4 came out a year before the console even launched.
LGR complained that Unreal Tournament 2003 from the year before only had 37 maps, which is crazy considering most multiplayer shooters on the 360 had maybe 10 maps with additional map pack DLC costing like 20 bucks for 3 maps
can you imagine playing a FPS with a controller? the insanity
I play single-player FPS with controllers to save my wrist, it gets enough mouse fatigue at work
trick your job into buying a trackball or one of those ergonomic “vertical mouse” things?
They even have vertical mice with a trackball!
vertical mice are a lie… i bought one because my hand was getting sore from being on a computer all day and while it helped with that i found it was pretty hard to not click and drag shit constantly by accident… clicking in the lateral direction often caused the mouse to move slightly too and would click/drag when i didn’t want to do that
How are they a lie? They take some getting used to, that’s all. I’ve been using them for years and they genuinely saved my wrist. Now any non-ergonomic mouse feels uncomfortable.
it’s a lie because you can’t use it like a normal mouse… it causes so much more work
Getting a gameball literally changed my life. They’re fukken pricey tho i would try to find a decent used trackball now (or buy arcade machine components and make one myself maybe) if I needed one.
Would love to if I weren’t an “independent contractor”
Gyroscopic controls
gah, even worse
leaning to play with a gyro is hard at first, and you can of course be limited by having a low-quality gyro in your controller, but cross the threshold and it’s better than a joystick by miles.
not as good as a mouse or even a trackball tho
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy: