- Joined
- Oct 7, 2016
i have always wanted to get into the mgs games, but i never did. i always hear good things about them, though, so i feel like i am missing out.
is it worth it to play all the games?
is it worth it to play all the games?
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i have always wanted to get into the mgs games, but i never did. i always hear good things about them, though, so i feel like i am missing out.
is it worth it to play all the games?
What about survive thoughYes and no.
MG1 and 2 are great, but are totally products of their time and total trope-starters as far as the game series goes. MG2 didn't get a goddamned Western Release until almost 20 years after it was released. You basically are stuck with the choice between an Emulator for it or flagging down one of the MGS collection. I honestly prefer the NES version of Metal Gear 1; it runs infinitely smoother than the MSX version and has a number of changes that make it less of a fucking pain in the dick to play.
MGS1 is rough. While it came out in a time when it was bleeding edge tech on the PS1, the game has a number of structural issues that tamp down just how fun it is, with an insane amount of backtracking and a fucking insane amount of callbacks to MG2 (seriously, almost every single boss-fight in the game is a reference). A lot of quality-of-life improvements the series would get just aren't in the original, and while it's definitely worth playing, it's aged fucking terribly. If you can nail it, its remake, The Twin Snakes, which was released on Gamecube, is fucking amazing and despite some bizarre gameplay choices is easily the game's most solid version.
MGS2 is the one that everyone loves to shit on, because it sits upon a throne of WTF. The game's plot is ridiculously convoluted, with the game introducing hundreds of new ideas and concepts that only get described in later games, tons of questionable logic, and a narrative that develops attention deficit disorder as you play and can't keep a consistent tone for more than 20 minutes at a stretch. Graphically it was great for the time and it is a decent game on its own merits, but the fact that it basically lied to the fanbase in the promotional materials and the fact that it brought in the character Raiden (who would late redeem himself and become sort of badass) means a lot of people fucking hate it. You can basically skip it without consequence, though it's worth a playthrough if you're willing to give it a chance; this shows a game taking chances that no developer in the world would have the balls to try today.
MGS3 is widely considered the best one. Though I disagree with this, it is easily one of the best games in the series and fucking gleams with polish and care. The plot is heavily mired in 1970s-80s politics and uses it quite well as a backdrop for its story, which essentially is the first one, chronologically, in the series. The jungle environments, huge amount of interactivity, and ungodly amount of bonus content make this an absolute treat, and the last half-hour or so of the game is legitimately touching and tragic.
While the most story-heavy of the bunch, MGS4 is notorious for its horrid cutscene-to-gameplay ratio. Fans of the series will want to see how things end, and the game has ten fucktons of great moments, but there's so many issues getting there that it has trouble, and the fact that it's PS3 exclusive and never got an HD release means you actually might have a great deal of bother getting to play it. I like it for mostly trying to do some new things and really trying its level best to provide some level of closure for this confusing spidernest of a series.
Revengeance is a (shockingly) canon story rife with cyborg ninja flip-outs. It's pure bouncy anarchic fun but it also has some interesting callbacks to MGS2 and 4 and gives you a fantastic view into just how irreparably fucked-up Raiden is mentally. The entire game has Autism, but it's one of the hilarious strains and the inability to keep its spaghetti in its pockets is outright endearing. It also has one of the internet's finest memes:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=TEM5hW6BMJAYes, Hideo Kojima predicted Trump 3 years before the election.
MGS: Peace Walker is a damned solid side-story showing Big Boss' search for meaning following MGS3. It's got some great gameplay, was the first multiplayer MGS that wasn't just a versus game like Substinence's MGO, and the story is the primary lead-in for MGSV (along with ground zeroes). It's available via the MGS Collection, and it's a damned fun game in and of itself, frankly looking fantastic for what is, essentially, a PSP port.
Ground Zeroes is purely setup for MGSV and is essentially a full-price demo for it. While it has a ton of content in and of itself (including a Raiden mission in one version of the game), the game's overall content is pretty threadbare and it exists solely to drum up support for MGSV. All evidence is that Kojima was against making it anything other than a demo so while it's mechanically rock-solid, I can't really recommend you go out and buy it.
MGSV is my favorite one in the series, essentially covering the time between Peace Walker and Metal Gear 1. It is loaded with dangerous amounts of the 1980s and the gameplay is, IMHO, the best of the series. Its story is also, while traditionally MGS-style convoluted nightmare-fuel, filled with some fantastic moments and the open-ended mission design menas you can come up with some.... Well, unorthodox ways to S-rank a given mission....
https://youtube.com/watch?v=2zMyy69pi7g
MGSV gets a lot of shit because Konami basically kneecapped the game because Kojima kept fucking with them. A lot of story was sliced out at the last minute and while the game still works ostensibly, it's also got some issues that just aren't resolved by this.
All in all, most of them are damned good and worth your time, but a lot of them are timesinks and each and every game in it has some kind of issue or another, ranging from awkward controls to insane design decisions to just poor map design.
What about survive though
It looks terrible and you where supposed to be triggered.No idea. Haven't played it and have zero interest.
MG1 and 2 are great, but are totally products of their time and total trope-starters as far as the game series goes. MG2 didn't get a goddamned Western Release until almost 20 years after it was released. You basically are stuck with the choice between an Emulator for it or flagging down one of the MGS collection. I honestly prefer the NES version of Metal Gear 1; it runs infinitely smoother than the MSX version and has a number of changes that make it less of a fucking pain in the dick to play.
It looks terrible and you where supposed to be triggered.
Fuck you and your essays you ruin everything
I have a copy of Metal Gear Solid 5 that I payed 8 dollars for 3 months ago. Haven't payed it yet.
I actually got the game free via my bank's rewards program.
I found it far more fun than I ever thought I was going to, especially given all the carping it got.
It looks like a dumb version of MGSV co op and it also looks terrible.What about survive though
Yes and no.
MG1 and 2 are great, but are totally products of their time and total trope-starters as far as the game series goes. MG2 didn't get a goddamned Western Release until almost 20 years after it was released. You basically are stuck with the choice between an Emulator for it or flagging down one of the MGS collection. I honestly prefer the NES version of Metal Gear 1; it runs infinitely smoother than the MSX version and has a number of changes that make it less of a fucking pain in the dick to play.
MGS1 is rough. While it came out in a time when it was bleeding edge tech on the PS1, the game has a number of structural issues that tamp down just how fun it is, with an insane amount of backtracking and a fucking insane amount of callbacks to MG2 (seriously, almost every single boss-fight in the game is a reference). A lot of quality-of-life improvements the series would get just aren't in the original, and while it's definitely worth playing, it's aged fucking terribly. If you can nail it, its remake, The Twin Snakes, which was released on Gamecube, is fucking amazing and despite some bizarre gameplay choices is easily the game's most solid version.
MGS2 is the one that everyone loves to shit on, because it sits upon a throne of WTF. The game's plot is ridiculously convoluted, with the game introducing hundreds of new ideas and concepts that only get described in later games, tons of questionable logic, and a narrative that develops attention deficit disorder as you play and can't keep a consistent tone for more than 20 minutes at a stretch. Graphically it was great for the time and it is a decent game on its own merits, but the fact that it basically lied to the fanbase in the promotional materials and the fact that it brought in the character Raiden (who would late redeem himself and become sort of badass) means a lot of people fucking hate it. You can basically skip it without consequence, though it's worth a playthrough if you're willing to give it a chance; this shows a game taking chances that no developer in the world would have the balls to try today.
MGS3 is widely considered the best one. Though I disagree with this, it is easily one of the best games in the series and fucking gleams with polish and care. The plot is heavily mired in 1970s-80s politics and uses it quite well as a backdrop for its story, which essentially is the first one, chronologically, in the series. The jungle environments, huge amount of interactivity, and ungodly amount of bonus content make this an absolute treat, and the last half-hour or so of the game is legitimately touching and tragic.
While the most story-heavy of the bunch, MGS4 is notorious for its horrid cutscene-to-gameplay ratio. Fans of the series will want to see how things end, and the game has ten fucktons of great moments, but there's so many issues getting there that it has trouble, and the fact that it's PS3 exclusive and never got an HD release means you actually might have a great deal of bother getting to play it. I like it for mostly trying to do some new things and really trying its level best to provide some level of closure for this confusing spidernest of a series.
Revengeance is a (shockingly) canon story rife with cyborg ninja flip-outs. It's pure bouncy anarchic fun but it also has some interesting callbacks to MGS2 and 4 and gives you a fantastic view into just how irreparably fucked-up Raiden is mentally. The entire game has Autism, but it's one of the hilarious strains and the inability to keep its spaghetti in its pockets is outright endearing. It also has one of the internet's finest memes:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=TEM5hW6BMJAYes, Hideo Kojima predicted Trump 3 years before the election.
MGS: Peace Walker is a damned solid side-story showing Big Boss' search for meaning following MGS3. It's got some great gameplay, was the first multiplayer MGS that wasn't just a versus game like Substinence's MGO, and the story is the primary lead-in for MGSV (along with ground zeroes). It's available via the MGS Collection, and it's a damned fun game in and of itself, frankly looking fantastic for what is, essentially, a PSP port.
Ground Zeroes is purely setup for MGSV and is essentially a full-price demo for it. While it has a ton of content in and of itself (including a Raiden mission in one version of the game), the game's overall content is pretty threadbare and it exists solely to drum up support for MGSV. All evidence is that Kojima was against making it anything other than a demo so while it's mechanically rock-solid, I can't really recommend you go out and buy it.
MGSV is my favorite one in the series, essentially covering the time between Peace Walker and Metal Gear 1. It is loaded with dangerous amounts of the 1980s and the gameplay is, IMHO, the best of the series. Its story is also, while traditionally MGS-style convoluted nightmare-fuel, filled with some fantastic moments and the open-ended mission design menas you can come up with some.... Well, unorthodox ways to S-rank a given mission....
https://youtube.com/watch?v=2zMyy69pi7g
MGSV gets a lot of shit because Konami basically kneecapped the game because Kojima kept fucking with them. A lot of story was sliced out at the last minute and while the game still works ostensibly, it's also got some issues that just aren't resolved by this
Metal Queer SolidMore like Metal Gay, am i right?
just kidding I love the series
Well, in V, if they failed, the army would still exist, albeit with only one leader, because of that wholeSome of my biggest let downs with MGSV, and its probably just me, were building Diamond Dogs and Miller. I was expecting more from them considering how Peace Walker handled Miller and MSF. They don't really seem to do anything except cause drama. Miller just second guesses Snake and makes weird decisions like not getting robot limbs and actively get his revenge while your army never leaves the base and gets into knife fights with eachother. Peace Walker has side missions that force you to play as your soldiers in ways that support Snake like holding off the enemy while he fights a boss or opening a short cut on the map. At one point in the story Miller actually leads the army into battle to save Snake. Even Portable Ops has a sequence were Snake gets captured and his soldiers have to find out where he is and stage a rescue. In MGSV Snake tells Miller he needs back up and Miller decides to bring himself, the other cripple, and two soldiers as the back up.
I've tried MGS1 and MGS5 and they're by far some of the best video games I've ever played, and looking forward to trying the rest.i have always wanted to get into the mgs games, but i never did. i always hear good things about them, though, so i feel like i am missing out.
is it worth it to play all the games?
I've been thinking of getting a ps3 just for MGS 4 for awhile now I have more incentive. Until then I'll just go back to MGO3 and its crazy CQC clusterfucks.Metal Gear Solid 4's multiplayer was restored by fans a few years ago. This is great since Konami took it down and it was easily the best part of that game.
Very very recently they got it working on official PS3 firmware. Meaning all you need now to play it is a PS3 and a copy of the game.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=bX1HmjRVw18
There are downsides though. You need to wipe your existing data on your PS3 because the way it works is by reloading a backup. So you need to backup your save games/redownload your digital games. Also you need a copy of the game that has the MGO data on it. Meaning the original black label release or the Greatest Hits/Platinum release. The 25th anniversary/Legacy/Downloaded versions had this content scrubbed by Konami. You also need to not be banned from PSN.
If you're interested in trying it out the link is here. I can personally vouch that it is working on my PS3 super slim console.
https://savemgo.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=22&p=4423#p4423