• @[email protected]
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    71 month ago

    [email protected] might be of interest, if you don’t follow it.

    But yeah…there are a lot of perks to playing older games:

    • Due to the ubiquity of Internet access today, a lot of games get post-release patches, and ship in a not-entirely-polished state. You wait a few years, you get a game that’s actually finished.

    • There have been wikis, guides, and sometimes mods created.

    • The games that people are still playing are the ones that have stood the test of time, so it’s kinda easy to pick out good ones.

    • If a 3D game supports a higher framerate — and many don’t, due to things like physics running at a fixed frequency — on modern, high-refresh-rate monitors, 3D games can be pleasantly smooth.

    There are some downsides, though:

    • With multiplayer-oriented games, the community can have moved on, rendering the game not very playable.

    • The game may not leverage your hardware very well. You may have an 86 bazillion core processor, and especially older games are likely to be using one of them. I have a couple of games I like, like Oxygen Not Included, that really don’t use multiple cores well…and I’d guess that a similar game released in 2025 likely would.

    • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝
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      41 month ago

      Due to the ubiquity of Internet access today, a lot of games get post-release patches, and ship in a not-entirely-polished state. You wait a few years, you get a game that’s actually finished.

      And also, 60 EUR for a single game is a price at least I am not willing to pay for the average game, so in addition to getting a better game, I also get a cheaper one.

      There is stuff worth paying that much out there, but it’s not Call of Duty Black Ops Eleventeen