this post was submitted on 14 Jun 2023
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Gaming
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I've so used to the terminology though that I'm probably not gonna change it. It's kind of a weird thing games have though, with movies or books you can just say you watched or read it, and it's usually implied that you finished it. But that's not always the case for games, you can play a game but might not ever finish it, or the game might not have an ending. Or it may have multiple endings - does doing one ending count? Or do I have to do all of them? Or is it nier automata, and I have to do 6 of them?
Don't really have a conclusion to this, just think it's interesting.
Oh I beat Nier Automata. I got ending W.
Must have been a speedrun!
Imagine beating the Stanley Parable...
I think Stanley Parable in a way is kind of about this idea. In the museum ending the female narrator tells you to stop the game, that if you play the whole thing and get every ending, you'll only see it as what it is: a series of paths and sequences laid out and planned beforehand. By stopping at one or two endings, you preserve the game's illusion of free choice.
Ultra Deluxe kind of confirms this idea too. The narrator tries to get back that feeling of playing for the first time, and not knowing what choices are available to you, but ultimately fails.
Definitely, I just find it interesting that we still use that term, even if it doesn't necessarily apply.