T O P I C R E V I E W |
Canyia |
Posted - 16 Aug 2004 : 22:31:12 Through the years many good D&D video games have come out such as, Baldur's Gate and Neverwinter Nights but along with those some horrible games have come along and been bought by unsuspecting gamers who would eventually find out that these games are nothing more than expensive glorified coasters. I'm here to find out which one of them is the suckiest game that ever did suck in the history of D&D games that suck.
I nominate Pool Of Radiance. |
23 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
dutch206 |
Posted - 29 Sep 2004 : 01:10:14 I have been a huge fan of the Forgotten realms setting both in PnP and video game formats for a very long time. I never knew this website existed until a little while ago, though, so thanks for the welcome Sirius. |
SiriusBlack |
Posted - 28 Sep 2004 : 15:37:21 quote: Originally posted by dutch206
Honestly, Faraer, I wasn't flaming anybody.
If it helps, not every scribe took your post as flaming or "garbage rhetoric." Moreover, welcome to the forums. Most scribes are very friendly. I hope this initial experience hasn't turned you off to the message board. |
dutch206 |
Posted - 28 Sep 2004 : 14:06:43 Honestly, Faraer, I wasn't flaming anybody. TOEEE really was unplayable. I remember this one part of the game where it would crash to the desktop every time I tried to enter Rufus and Burne's tower in town. I literally could not play the game because of all the crashes. |
Arivia |
Posted - 27 Sep 2004 : 12:25:36 quote: Originally posted by Hymn
Ok the problem with computer games these days are that the market demands a quick delivery. Knowing this the companies realese their games earlier then they really should with the thoughts of "we will just make a patch later to fix that and that." If the game instead had underwent a serious beta testing instead a lot of problems could have been solved prior to release. For example, the games on consoles tend to be less buggy then computer games since they can't patch them. And a note: I didn't have that many problems with ToEE, just a a heap of coding errors everywhere. Otherwise the story is a good one, but then I allready knew what would happen more or less.
No, console games are less buggy due to only needing to test for one hardware configuration. |
Hymn |
Posted - 27 Sep 2004 : 12:13:50 Ok the problem with computer games these days are that the market demands a quick delivery. Knowing this the companies realese their games earlier then they really should with the thoughts of "we will just make a patch later to fix that and that." If the game instead had underwent a serious beta testing instead a lot of problems could have been solved prior to release. For example, the games on consoles tend to be less buggy then computer games since they can't patch them. And a note: I didn't have that many problems with ToEE, just a a heap of coding errors everywhere. Otherwise the story is a good one, but then I allready knew what would happen more or less. |
Faraer |
Posted - 26 Sep 2004 : 21:15:55 Calling a game that many people play and enjoy with no problems at all 'unplayable' -- projecting your own experience onto everyone else -- is the kind of garbage rhetoric this forum is mostly free off. |
dutch206 |
Posted - 25 Sep 2004 : 13:47:36 Hands down....it has to be Temple of Elemental Evil. The reason: a 'coaster' is defined as a completely unplayable game. Pool of Radiance was at least playable, although I couldn't imagine why you would want to do that....
One more award....TOEE deserves a special award for programming stupidity. This game was so lame that the players formed their own website and began issuing their own patches!!!! |
Bakra |
Posted - 25 Aug 2004 : 21:01:08 I never played Temple, I watched the demo and knew it would be bad. My vote goes to Birthright: Gorgan's Alliance...nothing worse than a game you can not beat due to bugs.
Bakra |
Lina |
Posted - 24 Aug 2004 : 10:48:10 quote: Originally posted by Canyia
Well at least the AOL discs are free and you can make mini-hover crafts out of them in 5 easy steps
1.Take any cork, but preferably one that is tapered, and drill a 1/4" hole from top to bottom.
2.Using hot glue or modeling cement, glue the cork (large taper up) over the center hole of the CD (shiny side down). Allow glue to dry.
3.Carefully pull a regular party balloon over the large taper of the cork. If you used a straight wine cork, you may need to also apply a round of electrical tape to hold the balloon on the cork. 4.Blow air into the balloon through the hole in the CD, filling to a reasonable level. Once full, place your finger over the hole to hold the air.
5.Place the CD shiny side down on any flat, smooth surface. Voila! A Hovercraft.
You can also use unwanted CD's as coasters or smash thems to bits and make a collage on outdoor tiles and put them in the garden. |
Wood Elf Ranger |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 22:29:09 Same here The Temple of Elemental Evil worked just fine for me and I bought it right when it came out. I thought it was pretty good too the only thing that bugged me was the item creation system it was a little buggy for me. But one of the non-official user created patches did wonders to fix that as well as supposedly many other things that everyone else had toruble with that didn't seem to trouble me at all... *shrugs* |
Faraer |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 19:02:58 I've enjoyed playing The Temple of Elemental Evil, and on my system at least, even before the patch I had to look hard to see any of the bugs. |
Canyia |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 18:46:11 quote: Originally posted by Karesch
quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
I don't know if the site is still around, if they accomplished their mission, or what... But I know there was a website that wanted people to send them their AOL CDs. This group was going to wait until they had 1 million of the things, and then have them delivered to AOL headquarters.
Hmm . . .maybe we could do the same thing to Atari . . .
Oops . . .sorry folks, that was me posting. I forgot to log out of Karesch's account before I posted that. I'm using his computer if you couldn't guess . If I knew his password I would have just deleted it and re-posted it from my account but oh well . . . |
Karesch |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 18:40:26 quote: Originally posted by Wooly Rupert
I don't know if the site is still around, if they accomplished their mission, or what... But I know there was a website that wanted people to send them their AOL CDs. This group was going to wait until they had 1 million of the things, and then have them delivered to AOL headquarters.
Hmm . . .maybe we could do the same thing to Atari . . . |
Wooly Rupert |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 17:38:38 quote: Originally posted by Anubis
quote: Originally posted by Canyia
Well at least the AOL discs are free and you can make mini-hover crafts out of them in 5 easy steps ...
Very creative, Canyia. I'll bet one could create a website dedicated to "Things to do with those damn AOL CDs".
I don't know if the site is still around, if they accomplished their mission, or what... But I know there was a website that wanted people to send them their AOL CDs. This group was going to wait until they had 1 million of the things, and then have them delivered to AOL headquarters. |
The Wanderer |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 16:31:55 quote: Originally posted by Canyia
Well at least the AOL discs are free and you can make mini-hover crafts out of them in 5 easy steps ...
Very creative, Canyia. I'll bet one could create a website dedicated to "Things to do with those damn AOL CDs". |
SiriusBlack |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 16:21:13 quote: Originally posted by kahonen Temple of Elemental Evil was undoubtedly a wart on the backside of PC games. How companies can get away with producing such bug-ridden dross and remain in busines baffles me. What baffles me more. is why people continue to buy them.
I like your awards. It reminds me of the Oscars when a certain film sweeps the awards.
The latter statement in your quote, IMNSHO, answers the previous statements. I think companies can get away with producing such stuff as long as consumers purchase it. I think this statement applies not just to the Computer gaming line, but elswhere too. |
kahonen |
Posted - 23 Aug 2004 : 12:57:45 Using some of MuadDib's categories:
Worst Story: Temple of Elemental Evil. I couldn't play for long enough between crashes to find the story.
Worst Gameplay: Temple of Elemental Evil. Perhaps I'm being unfair. You play, it crashes. It could be argued there is no gameplay.
Worst Execution: The Quality Assurance Team of Temple of Elemental Evil. I've seen credits for the same names on games since so whoever was responsible for the execution didn't do a very good job.
Most buggy: Temple of Elemental Evil Only game I've used where there are more bugs than game.
Worst Expansion Pack: Temple of Elemental Evil. OK, so they've not released one. If they do, you can guarantee it will be the worst.
Temple of Elemental Evil was undoubtedly a wart on the backside of PC games. How companies can get away with producing such bug-ridden dross and remain in busines baffles me. What baffles me more. is why people continue to buy them.
I've not bought a game involving Atari since until it's been out for 6 months+ so I can get a real indication of the quality of the product.
NWN2 - not a hope.
|
MuadDib |
Posted - 17 Aug 2004 : 09:09:28 Combined award of worst stroy, worst execution, worst charecterisation, worst tutorial, worst gameplay, most difficult and most ultimately pointless game.
Pools of Radiance : ruins of Myth Drannor
Most potential but failed to realise it, most buggy, most pointless, most frustratingly open-ended, most annoyingly pointless story line.
Temple of Elemental Evil
Worst expansion pack
Tales of the Sword Coast |
Winterfox |
Posted - 17 Aug 2004 : 08:11:33 quote: Originally posted by Arivia
Temple of Elemental Evil.
Seconded. Normal software has bugs; ToEE is a bug.
Honorary mention: the original NWN. |
Canyia |
Posted - 17 Aug 2004 : 04:53:48 Well at least the AOL discs are free and you can make mini-hover crafts out of them in 5 easy steps
1.Take any cork, but preferably one that is tapered, and drill a 1/4" hole from top to bottom.
2.Using hot glue or modeling cement, glue the cork (large taper up) over the center hole of the CD (shiny side down). Allow glue to dry.
3.Carefully pull a regular party balloon over the large taper of the cork. If you used a straight wine cork, you may need to also apply a round of electrical tape to hold the balloon on the cork. 4.Blow air into the balloon through the hole in the CD, filling to a reasonable level. Once full, place your finger over the hole to hold the air.
5.Place the CD shiny side down on any flat, smooth surface. Voila! A Hovercraft. |
SiriusBlack |
Posted - 17 Aug 2004 : 03:42:06 And here I thought this thread was about all the AOL discs that company insisted on sending me throughout the years. |
Karesch |
Posted - 17 Aug 2004 : 01:21:25 I've not played Temple of Elemental Evil, I've heard it was better than Pool of Radiance, but that says little..
I vote on Pool of Radiance. |
Arivia |
Posted - 17 Aug 2004 : 00:01:17 Temple of Elemental Evil. |