Imagine spending years playing San Andreas. GTA IV hasn’t been announced. Your mind races with the possibilities of a new game. You imagine they’re going to do a whole country instead of a few cities. You think of all the mini games, all the weapons, and customization. It is the first “next gen” GTA after all.

Then you have been playing IV for years. GTA V hasn’t been announced. Once again your mind races with possibilities. There is no end to the amount of detail it will have, there is nothing you can’t do, there is no limit to the map.

Now you’ve been playing V for years. Here we go again. But there really isn’t anything to imagine. You know it’s going to be just a bigger map. At least until it gets close to release, where the devs admit the map is the same size as V. They claim it’s okay because there’s more things to do. But all that means is more things to collect, more so-so mini games.

You’ve played RDR2 so you know how much detail it could have. You know they’ll simulate everything. So there can’t be any real surprises. You’ll see more wildlife. Your car windows will fog up. Your character will swat mosquitos.

You know the graphics can be just a little better, not like moving from PS2 to PS3. More reflections, slightly better lighting, a little more detail in the textures.

Now you realize you’re on the plateau. There are no more great heights to surmount.There is only lateral movement from here on out. GTA VI can only be as good as V, with marginal gains in every category, but not exceptional gains in any. You’ll drive from Point A to B. You’ll shoot the gangs. You’ll escort the cars. Everything you have already done.

There is a running theme in culture right now and it’s that large, long-standing franchises are starting to eat shit. They can no longer push the needle. GTA will join them.

  • Deadend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    8 months ago

    We still haven’t had a game combine Red Faction Guerrilla and Tears of the Kingdom.

    But then again, giant leaps are really only a video game thing.

    Movies in a lot of key technical ways haven’t changed in generations.

    Music as well.

    Not having a huge leap forward means the game has be Great and interesting.

    Like books.

    • barrbaric [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      8 months ago

      The advent of relatively cheap and easy digital effects have been a pretty big game changer for movies within the last two decades. Same goes for audio quality with digital storage compared to tape/vinyl.

      Books I got nothing, you win.

      • lorty@lemmygrad.ml
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        8 months ago

        If anything, the move to digital books and self-publishing has lowered the quality of books.

      • Deadend [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        Movies and music are “easier” as you could do great effects, it was just much harder and expensive.

        Same with music recording.

        Games may be getting close to movies of the 1960s where anything is possible if you have the budget And effort.

        You likely can’t do EVERYTHING in game, but can do good proximities.