The Very Many Questions-Not-Worth-Their-Own-Thread Thread XXXII

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I'm sure Gary Gygax in the 70s would like to have been told otherwise, before he started the whole D&D thing with Dave Arneson.
 
Mainly being able to make choices and decisions based on how you want to play your character.
Having recently played Divinity Original Sin 2, Witcher 3, and Dragon Age Inquisition, I can safely confirm in all of those games I was able to make any number of decisions based on how I wanted to play my character.
 
What RPGs do they have in mind? The earliest Western RPGs are pretty much direct adaptations of tabletop games, which have always emphasised player-driven story and gameplay. To the extent this is absent in older games, it's due to the limitations of the era.
 
What about older Western RPGs? If they act like Western RPGs begin with Morrowind, then naturally that's going to seem like the novelty, but it's not a realistic comparison.

I'm not sure. I think Morrowind is the earliest Western RPG that they've played, although they find Oblivion a lot better, but they also say that XCOM: Enemy Unknown is an RPG.
 
I'm not sure. I think Morrowind is the earliest Western RPG that they've played, but they also say that XCOM: Enemy Unknown is an RPG.
Well, they aren't very smart then.
Bethesda had been doing their own thing with Arena and Daggerfall, and Morrowind continued that. Open world RPGs -heck, open world games in general- weren't very common when Morrowind came out and it was regarded as a substantial break from contemporary RPGs.

With regards to XCOM, although it has some RPG elements (and frankly, which game doesn't these days) it is emphatically not an RPG. If they think XCOM is an RPG, then Battlefield 1 and Far Cry are RPGs because they feature classes and skill trees.
 
Well, they aren't very smart then.
Bethesda had been doing their own thing with Arena and Daggerfall, and Morrowind continued that. Open world RPGs -heck, open world games in general- weren't very common when Morrowind came out and it was regarded as a substantial break from contemporary RPGs.

With regards to XCOM, although it has some RPG elements (and frankly, which game doesn't these days) it is emphatically not an RPG. If they think XCOM is an RPG, then Battlefield 1 and Far Cry are RPGs because they feature classes and skill trees.

I think they call XCOM an RPG based on how it compares to Fire Emblem, that XCOM is essentially a western sci-fi Fire Emblem.
 
What's the origin of "vibes"/"vibrations"? Why did people start saying "I get good vibrations from him"? Is it a new age thing about energy vibrating/oscillating? Is it something in Buddhism? Is it about music?
By the time it went mainstream with he Beach Boys' Good Vibrations it was all about the feeling one got from other people or activities. I first heard "vibes" in the late sixties, but have the sense that it crossed over to the the hippies from the "beats" of the 1950s. It could even have roots in jazz.

Do large-volume mail senders get significant postage breaks from the USPS? I cannot figure out how say, Netflix runs a profitable DVD-by-mail business if they were charged full postage on each mailing.
Yes, they get a discount on volume and the more automated address info they include on their label such as carrier route designation, the lower their rate.
 
Where is checker slow vaccinate?
 
What about older Western RPGs? If they act like Western RPGs begin with Morrowind, then naturally that's going to seem like the novelty, but it's not a realistic comparison.

mmhh... but you could make quite some decisions in Morrowind...?
Fallout 1/2 and Plansecape Torment are from before that time, and were full of such decisions.
(cannot comment on earlier times)
 
I think I have mentioned to them more than once that I completed the first Fallout game almost as a pacifist by trying to talk through every situation I could, including the final boss.

I forgot to mention that they think that the decision making found in modern RPGs comes from the current Telltale adventure games like The Walking Dead.
 
Naturally.
 
For anybody who actually has a clue about fashion: what is an all-in-one dress?
 
Related to my rant:

What are the laws governing horse ownership in CA? Is it legal to let your horse poop on public trails and not clean it up?
 
I'd actually already seen that, but I can't find any *definition* of it.

It's a multi-purpose piece of clothing. You can wear it as a shirt, as a skirt, as a small dress, as a longer dress, as a belt, etc.
 
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