11th March 2010, 12:38 PM
It's funny you mention that about KH, because I liked exploring those worlds too. I was just too fast for the heartless so I just flew by them when I was exploring, or as a cub, just ran by. As much as I like the series though, the worlds are just really small snapshots of a few areas dedicated more to battle than anything else. The worlds being small? That I understand, there's a lot of different worlds they are trying to fit into one game.
The annoying thing about 358/2 Days is just how repetitive it gets. After playing the game, as much as I like certain aspects, it gets really old really fast visiting exactly the same worlds doing exactly the same thing over and over again just to fill a "mission" quota. I mean it's just plain bad design. Also, I got excited when I first realized I'd be able to go on pure "exploratory" missions until after I'd done a few and realized that the ultimate extent of that would be clicking on a bunch of question marks hidden in the level and then answering extremely painfully obvious questions about what all the clues "meant". Hardly what I had hoped for.
The annoying thing about 358/2 Days is just how repetitive it gets. After playing the game, as much as I like certain aspects, it gets really old really fast visiting exactly the same worlds doing exactly the same thing over and over again just to fill a "mission" quota. I mean it's just plain bad design. Also, I got excited when I first realized I'd be able to go on pure "exploratory" missions until after I'd done a few and realized that the ultimate extent of that would be clicking on a bunch of question marks hidden in the level and then answering extremely painfully obvious questions about what all the clues "meant". Hardly what I had hoped for.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)