I took a
while to figure out how I was going to approach this entry.
This isn’t
my typical blog entry where I talk about an episode with a carefully lined out
review, or where I rant angrily at game because the programmers forgot to put
on their programming hats when they stepped out their doors that morning.
No.
Like Mass
Effect 3, this review is a horse of a different color. This is targeted towards
those people who, like an angry mob, invaded the internet with their loath and
hatred towards this game. Because I think somebody here is doing something they
shouldn’t be doing.
I like to think that I live in a World where the fans of stuff don’t usually jump to conclusions or, when they do, they realize their mistake a few weeks later. Sadly though, that’s absolute wishful thinking and it’s completely unjustified. I a naive guy, I admit that, but that’s because I don’t want to give up hope on the people whom I appreciate so much. That’s why this is so hard.
Let’s get
started.
When Mass
Effect 3 was released, not one day later, I began to see the reactions towards
the game. I started to see the reviews, the Facebook entries, the tweets, the
blogs, the jokes, and of course the outrage about the ending. I heard claims of
the game lasting well under twelve hours. I heard people saying that the game
feels rushed because EA force BioWare to publish an unfinished game. I heard
the Day Zero DLC and Real Ending DLC drama. But what caught my eye the most was
what people were wielding as their flagpole for the entire barrage of insults.
The sentence “Our decisions have no impact”.
I don’t
want to come across as a hypocrite, so I will tell you what I did.
I got
worried. Very worried.
I feared
that my favorite videogame trilogy of all time was going to get ruined right in
the final chapter and that every decision I made, every thing I did during the
first two games was going to be just for naught. So I did the most sensible
thing. I went on to YouTube and checked the ending myself. Needless to say I
was angry. I saw the three different colored explosions, the ending being
basically a copy paste, a path decision between A,B and C, rendering the whole
involving storytelling to a final decision where you choose what you want to
be, instead of working hard for what you want to see.
And then I
raged.
I am broke
at the moment. Well okay, let me re-send that. I am in a recession at the
moment. I don’t have a very stable job, and the money income is pretty scarce,
so getting new videogames has become quite hard. This is one of the reasons why
I moved onto Ponies as my hobby, they are cheaper to acquire. But with the
current money that I had I couldn’t afford to buy a copy of the game. So I
waited until the store had a second hand copy of the game ready so I could rent
it and play it.
I stood
away from the whole Mass Effect 3 fiasco the same way Shepard stays away from
Earth while looking for war assets. And then one morning I see my game store
has a copy of the game for rent. So I rent it, I take it home, and this is the
story of how my gameplay experience went so far.
> Huh,
my female Shepard looks more like Samus Aran now, neat!
(Yes, I
play with a fem Shep that looks like Samus, because Jennifer Hale voiced Samus
in the Prime trilogy).
> I saw
this in the demo, moving on.
> Cool,
that scene felt like Minority Report.
> Oh no,
is he going to be okay?
> Alright,
let’s get the team back!
> Well
that was epic.
> Oh my
God, that was even more epic.
> That
was massive! I can’t believe I just did that!
> Oh my
God. I…I fixed it. I fixed it. After more than a thousand years, I did it!
> I’m
giggling like an idiot in this part because Tali just showed up.
> Oh God
don’t do this to me, no, no, no, no, don’t make me choose, don’t make me!
> It’s
just how I imagined it!
> YEAH!
YEAH! DIE, DIE, DIE YOU MOTHERF*CKER! DIE! HA! Now that was satisfying!
> Now
for the final run.
> Oh
God, the tears, I can’t hold them!
>
Holysh*t, in the name of The Goddess, what the hell is going on?
> Is
this…Oooooh my God, you’ve got to be kidding me.
> Wait,
wait, wait, is this the ending? The ending everyone was raging about. This is
it? And people where butthurt over this ending?
> I am
so writing a blog entry about this when I wake up tomorrow.
Well, that
last one should be corrected to “after dinner” instead of "waking up".
Seriously
guys, what is the matter with you? I am severely disappointed and seriously
concerned. I am going to address this very carefully.
Brought to you by the voters of Dragon Age 2. |
First of
all, that whole gaming experience took me a total gameplay time of thirty four
hours. Thirty four hours during which I didn’t skip a cutscene or a dialogue,
and where I paid close attention to all the details. Second, I played the game
in hardcore mode, because there is a severe gap in difficulty settings where
“normal” is too easy and “hardcore” is almost insanity, but it’s a lot more fun
that way. It makes you plan strategies more carefully and it makes you feel
really accomplished when you kill a very hard enemy. Third, I didn’t read a
single codex entry. I never read codex entries unless I’m really curious about
them. Fourth, I didn’t have any of the DLC’s released for the game. And fifth
and last, I used my saved game from both Mass Effect 1 and 2 to see if there
were any changes in the game.
And now
that I said that let me dismantle the arguments that fans and haters have been
using to tear this game down, starting with the main one.
- “Our decisions have no impact!”
Yes they
do. In Mass Effect 3 you will see everything and everyone you have affected
through your decisions in the previous two games. Were you a jerk to Conrad
Verner or were you nice to him? Did you save the Rachni Queen? Did you take
Grunt out of his tank? Did you revived Legion? Did you save the autistic biotic
from Project Overlord? What kind of class did you pick? Did you romance someone
in the first game but then romanced someone else in the second one? How far did
your romance experience go? Did you saved everyone in the suicide mission? And
so many more. I was dumbfounded as I walked around the Citadel and people would
stop me to say “Hey Shepard! You helped me in the first game and now I will
help you in this one, count on me to take down the Reapers”, or “Thanks to you
now we have a family”, or “I should’ve killed you back then, I am going to
correct my mistake now”. I felt like BioWare was giving me a lot for what I did
in the previous two games. Without DLC or anything there was a lot of pay off
there, I felt great! I felt like my decisions matter. I felt like I did make a
difference in the way the game develops. Even the smallest conversation from
the first Mass Effect game was addressed in this one. Without DLC or anything I
was shocked at the amount of detail BioWare put into this, let alone full conversations
addressing each subject. There is a lot of work going on here guys, and you
just didn’t appreciate it.
- “The Ending is absolute garbage!”
SPOILERS IN
THIS ENTRY, IF YOU WANT TO AVOID THEM
CONTINUE TO
THE NEXT ONE.
When I
first heard about the ending, a few weeks later I started hearing about
something called “The Indoctrination Theory”. I didn’t dig much into it, and I
assumed it was a fan theory explaining that everything that happens in the
ending proves that Shepard has been indoctrinated. With that knowledge in my
head and nothing else, I played through the entire game and when I reached at
the end I could pretty much see why people said this. I said I only read the
codex entries that I am interested into. Well, I happen to be very interested
in the whole indoctrination process and how it works. One of the Mass Effect
novels actually narrates how it feels to be indoctrinated and possessed by
Reaper technology, with all the gruesome details.
To have all
the clues to this one must have played the Mass Effect 2 DLC The Arrival, where
Shepard gets hit by Reaper tech and starts having visions and headaches. Those
are the first steps of indoctrination. Shepard’s dreams are the next clue. In
them she sees a child she couldn’t rescue. The Reapers use this to get to her
and mine her free will and confidence. Things get even more evident when you
reach the end of the game, the Reaper beam hits you, and everything turns into
this dreamlike landscape. Your pistol has infinite ammo, and there are trees
from your nightmares on the ground. When you get inside the space ship where
the ending awaits you, it’s a mix between the Collector, Shadow Broker and
Citadel Ships. Probably the Reapers used Shepard’s memories to build something
familiar to her? I’m not sure. Then you are confronted by Anderson and The
Illusive Man, and this is where I knew this was an indoctrination process. If
you watched enough David Lynch movies you know how to read cryptic messages. Anderson is the good part
of Shepard, her soldier part, her human part. The Illusive Man is the invader,
the reaper tech that tries to poses her, depending who she gets rid off, one
side wins over the other. However, the game doesn’t end there. There is one
last trial for you to get through and it’s a devious one. At the end you are
given those three options. Two of them are a trap, just a way to give in to the
Reapers and complete the indoctrination. The last one is the right one, the one
that destroys the Reapers and frees you from their control. Now, in Mass Effect
we all know that blue is good and red is bad. Here the good option is actually
the red one. The game screws with you making you think the blue is the right
choice, when in fact it isn’t.
That’s just
Machiavelli, I love it.
- “BioWare has given in to Electronic Arts!”
False.
EA
only publishes the game; it has nothing to do with the actual game development.
If you want to blame EA for something you have to blame them for not releasing
the game complete. Releasing the game and then the DLC to cash in more money is
not right and I will back any one of you on this subject. EA should’ve allowed
BioWare to release the game with everything in it, including the real ending
that's coming on April. Do you have any idea how much that pisses me off? But then
again, that doesn’t seem to be what people are complaining about! People are
complaining because they think EA was involved in how the game ended.
Uhm, you
guys know that this game was written way before it was programmed, right? This
thing has been written since the very first game was published. I think BioWare
has overrated its fans, me included. If anything this entry is me back pedaling
over some stuff that I said that I now regret. They thought we could get
foreshadowing without having to patronize us or take us by the hand. I think
the biggest disappointment here was the one we gave to BioWare, because BioWare
didn’t give us a disappointing game. This leads me to the final point as
something I want to address.
YOU ARE JUDGING AN
ENTIRE GAME
BY THE LAST TWENTY
MINUTES!!!
You
dimwits.
Did you forget all the other epic stuff that you did? Did you forget
all that? How could you? No really, how can you dedicate around
thirty hours to play this and forget everything you’ve done because of the last
twenty minutes? I know it feels like having a super awesome meal and when it
comes to the desert the cake has transformed into three different colored cupcakes that all taste the same, but come on guys, there is over-reacting and then there is
going nuts.
I am a
brony, alright? I was there during the biggest sh*tstorm of the year. I was
there when Derpy Hooves was changed, and I saw people tearing each other apart
over a cartoon horse that got changed and that nobody cares about now. There
was so much drama you could literally put your glass next to the screen and it
would fill with fanboy tears. I have never seen anything like it, and I
probably won’t see it ever again. There were petitions, there were movements in
twitter and Facebook, and there was a lot of nagging and picking and bitching.
We moved on, I hope, but I want you to understand this.
That was a
maelstrom of a sh*tstorm. That was a Perfect sh*tstorm. The DerpyGate made the
Brony Community look like a bunch of lunatics. It’s true. It’s okay. We can live
with that.
Okay.
That whole
thing is nothing, nothing I tell you, compared to what happened over at the
BioWare forums. That wasn’t just “Take back Earth”, that was “Take back Mass
Effect 3”.
There were not just petitions, there were donation drives. There were websites
offering full refunds for opened copies of the game. There were people banging
their acne riddled faces against the keyboard and there was so much drama that
I really couldn’t understand it.
And don’t
tell me that I am doing something wrong when comparing these two events,
because Derpy Hooves and the Ending of Mass Effect 3 have the same impact. One
is a cartoon horse. The other is a videogame ending. And you know what those
two have in common? They are sub-culture material. One is a cartoon, the other
is a game. They are on the same level. They are entertainment. They are not
going to make you have a better life. They are not going to make you more
successful. They are not going to change anything. They are there for you to
have fun with them. They are there to make you laugh at how silly they are, or
to make you feel invested at how deep they are.
It’s almost
the end of the entry, so let me clarify something. I am not a Mass Effect
fanboy, I wish I was. I wish I knew all of the Codex entries, or the
coordinates, or data of every planet. No, I know nothing of that. I know
strategies to finish the games on Insanity. I know the names of the squad
mates, or at least their first names. I can hum a couple of songs. I have the
first two games, I plan to finally buy the third one soon (I rented it to play
it, remember?). I have a Tali doll. I have the game guides, and three of the
novels. But that’s it. I play the games, I enjoy their characters, I love their
stories, and that’s it. I’m a fanboy of other things. I’m a fanboy of My Little
Pony (duh). I’m a super fanboy of Pokémon! I’m a fanboy of Fanhunter!
So from the
perspective of a guy who loves the games, appreciates the expanded universe,
and can get foreshadowing when he sees it, I want you guys to know this, and
with you guys I mean all the fans of Mass Effect that went insane at the
ending, and demanded BioWare to change it with donation drives and petitions.
You are
looking like a bunch of idiots.
Seriously,
it’s sad. It’s very, very sad. All that rage, all that butthurt, all those
donations and petitions, and you know what all that changed? It changed
nothing. You made no impact on the game. You made an impact, indeed; on the
internet. And your impact looks like a broken ass. BioWare is not going to
change the game. They never will. You know why? Because it’s their game, and
they can do whatever they want with it. And you know what? You are going to buy
the DLC’s. You are going to. You will buy them. You will play them. And you will
rush to your Tumblr and rage and pick and moan and bitch about it, because
that’s how every fandom reacts, some less than others. You can hate the ending
all you want. But you know you want answers. You want to know what really
happened. So all of your nagging is hollow. Like a husk. If anything, the
indoctrination worked with you guys, way too well.
Wait for
April.
Stop your
bitching.
Grow up.
END OF
LINE.
(NOTE: If
anyone felt offended while reading this, please know that I just couldn’t hold
my anger towards the people who complained so loudly about the ending. I just
can’t get my head wrapped around that childish, petulant reaction, so I put it
in the shape of an article. If you felt offended, leave a comment letting me
know about it).
*spoiler free* Was expecting this post since the uprising of the massfanboys. I'm glad to see that we share similar thoughts: judging an entire game by the last half hour is bullshit. I recognize that the ending felt a little... fast. I nearly missed the whole explanation of your choices (and because of that, i chose the blue option... shit xD), and i feel that the ending needed a slower aproach. Anyway, I saw a youtube video with an ending plot theory that makes you think everything... if i find it again, i'll post it.
ReplyDeleteAnyway, I find it it was a good ending (not a great one), so i hope they don't change it in dlcs.
Tio, esto en español te lo respondo XD Cuanto me alegro de ver que compartimos la misma opinión.
DeleteEl final está apresurado de cojones, pero juzgar todo el juego por el final es insultante.
No lo van a cambiar en los DLCs, creeme. Los DLCs van a explicar que hostias ha pasado y con suerte podremos ponerle un final a la trilogia de una vez por todas. Es un asco tener que pagar por ello, pero quiero ver que pasa XD
I think you just replied to the wrong comment.
DeleteLet me train my english :P
Deleterumoured free dlc to EXTEND the ending. yay!
Deletehttp://www.pcgamer.com/2012/04/05/mass-effect-3-extended-cut-free-dlc-to-expand-ending-this-summer/
Entonces...este juego es como Twin Peaks, cierto?
ReplyDeleteBah, yo estoy muy atrasado en el tiempo. Ni siquiera jugue el primer juego.
Una opinion muy sincera pero solo queria decirte que al final tu opinion es pesimista. Dijiste que tus decisiones en el juego si importaban al final pero luego que tus decisiones en la vida real no tienen ningun efecto y ya que el juego, en la vida real, se maneja por opciones pre-establecidas programadas significa que tus decisiones en el juego tampoco importaron. Es como jugar a Elige tu propia aventura, puedes elegir la pagina 2 o la pagina 6 pero no hay forma de cambiar lo que tienen escrito.
O al menos eso entendi de tu explicacion...
Basicamente, dijiste que la vida no tiene sentido y nuestras opiniones a la larga no importan nunca.
Gracias, necesitaba alegrarme...
Comppletly agreed iver here, and specially considering that the last mission was the best mission in a ME game PERIOD.
ReplyDeleteAlso, if the actually change the ending it will send the industry back ten years. Because whenever somone try to make a bold ending someone elso will say "The video game fans are too dumb for that! Dont you remember what happened with ME3?"
http://www.holytaco.com/why-all-the-endings-of-mass-effect-3-are-terrible-a-long-diatribe/
ReplyDeleteThis guy had an interesting thought. What if the fourth choice was not to choose.
I am not judging this game by it's gameplay. The gameplay was a bunch of very linear run-down-the-hallway shooting missions, and all the really cool "explore planets/find side missions" from ME2 were replaced with "you got item, give item to person A."
ReplyDeleteNo, I am judging this as a work of fiction. Forget the gameplay, I am judging this as a story, and I choose to judge stories by how they begin, how they progress, and how they end.
I did not like this ending. I found that Mass Effect's strongest theme had been about how Organics and Synthetics can work together. When I helped both the Geth and the Quarians find peace together, I teared up, that was beutiful. At the end of the game, I was told that that peace was nothing but a lie, that it would all fall apart, and that the only way to survive would be to destroy all of Synthetic life, either by taking away its free will, destroying it completely, or forcibly merging it with something else without consent.
That is my problem. I don't agree with the ending's premise that Synthetics and Organics can't live in peace. Also, I don't accept that the Normady would abandon Shepard, and I don't like that you blow up the MAss Relays, since the game already showed that destroying a MAss Relay destroys the entire solar system (The Arrival, and the information in the Codex).
I don't care about the choices. I don't care that the ending was sad, I like sad endings. I don't like being forced to commit genocide, and I simply DON'T AGREE with the God-Child. I think he was wrong.
Is Mass Effect 3 a great game? No. It's not a bad one, it has some truly heart-wrenching, excellent scenes, but the gameplay was more fun and varried in the second game, as far as I am concerned. Is Mass Effect 3 a great story? I would have said yes, but I do judge things on how they ended, and I don't like the philosophy of the ending scene. That is my problem. Genocide and the death of Synthetics are not okay.
You didn't read my entry at all, did you?
DeleteThe ending takes place inside Shepard's head. When Shepard controls or merges with the Reapers, he is giving in to the indoctrination. When he destroys them, he is getting rid of the indoctrination. This isn't the real ending. The real ending comes in the next DLC.
Also, the God-Child was the last mean of the reapers to try and submit Shepard's will.
The ending is not real, it takes place inside Shepard's mind. Take that into account, and it all makes sense. Let's not jump to conclusions until we see what happens in the DLC's.
Of course I read your article! I read the title and a couple of words and jumped immediately to my own conclusions in order to rant - THE WAY GOD INTENDED.
ReplyDeleteAs always, I stand by entirely whatever I may have feverishly written this morning before eating breakfast, because that is when I put my best foot forward.
In all seriousness, I do feel that fans had a right to get as angry as they did, but they did not have a right to be assholes, or to verbally abuse people, or to claim that Mass Effect was ruined forever (it wasn't, it just had a lousy conclusion at the end of the third game). No, I want to rephrase that. They had a right to be disappointed, and to express that disappointment. In hindsight the blood-screaming foam rage feels very strange, like Bioware used subliminal messaging to implant triggers in are brains. We wake up a few hours later, our hands covered in gore, unable to recall how we got there or what the "I was promised little blue children" message scrawled on the wall in blood is all about.
DeleteThe people who claimed that was an incredibly well-written ending, though... are totally wrong. ME3 had much better dialogue scenes than that entire ending (my personal favorite being Shep and Garrus shooting bottles on the Citadel. So great.)
I'm just... disappointed, and that leaves me feeling empty. I need to fill that emptyness, and I don't know how, so I lash out instead. taste the rainbow of fruit pain that is my empty space!
Fans had the right to get angry, they didn't have the right to get angry as they did. Because they got angry as a bunch of assholes who verbally abused other people and claimed that Mass Effect was ruined forever.
DeleteI am so happy I don't count myself amongst those. I am a massive fan of the series, and I don't see anything wrong with the ending. As for the ending being really written, it is. It so is. Did you forget Alan Wake? This ending is cryptic and ambiguous for a reason. Wait for the DLC. If the DLC proves to be super awesome, these rabid fans are going to end up like the biggest bunch of tools in the history of geekdom. This would be unprecedented. A big company shutting down its rabid fans because of how wrong they are.
As for feeling empty, feel empty when a beloved relative dies. Not when a videogame ends the way you didn't want to.
I found no part of that cryptic. I wasn't left with questions except fan-complaints (where was Joker going and why?). I just found the dialogue to be bad, Shepard's responses to be dull,, and the god-child to be very dull. I liked the stuff with Illusive man and everything, it's that very last dialogue that I, PERSONALLY AND SUBJECTIVELY dislike. You liked it? That's fine. There's a lot of thing I like that people don't (anchovies are awesome, and so was Supertrain).
ReplyDelete"As for feeling empty, feel empty when a beloved relative dies. Not when a videogame ends the way you didn't want to."
You don't feel that's a rather limiting way to view the power of narrative? I was MOVED by Mass Effect's ending - I might not have liked it, but it produced powerful emotional responses. I disagree that should limit powerful emotions solely to death. If a story affects me emotionally, I'd like to show it, not stoically hide it.