this post was submitted on 18 Aug 2023
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I've been thinking about the PS1 game 'Driver' a lot recently. It's a game I spent a lot of time on during my youth, and whilst I'm sure it doesn't hold up some 20 years later, it was still a highlight from my 'gaming youth'.

As much as I know I enjoyed it however, I don't remember all that much about it. Aside from pulling the perfect reverse hand-break-turn in order to leave the garage/lockup area and begin the game proper. I didn't need to pull this manoeuvre of course, I could just, you know...drive out, but something felt so incredibly satisfying about it that I couldn't stop myself.

Which brings me to this point of this thread. What's something you do in a game for no reason other than it feels damn good?

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[โ€“] reverendsteveii@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

any game that gives you control over sheathing/holstering your weapon instead of waiting for your character to do it for you

I recently bought red dead 2 and that feature took some getting used to. Especially because the controls are context sensitive and the button that starts a conversation when your gun is holstered is the same button that points that gun at a stranger if it's out. I'm used to it now and compulsively holster my gun as soon as the shooting seems to be done, but for a while there was a lot of "Howdy partner. Fine weather we're having ain't.....no wait wait sorry I didn't mean....ah shit" and suddenly I'm in a shootout with the law and out $50 for my bounty when I just wanted to buy a bottle of whiskey.

[โ€“] DebatableRaccoon@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I know the exact problem and unfortunately that's just a staple of contextual buttons. I generally found I had a lot of problems with RDR2 so I can't say too much inbiased and it's not to bash R* (this time) but when button layout is handled well, it's manual controls like I was talking about that make the experience feel that much better.

On the subject of contextual button commands, Gavin from Achievement Hunter made the joke comparison during a Hitman video (pretty sure it was Hitman). To paraphraae because it's been so long, "Don't you just hate it when you walk up to a window in real life and jump out of it instead of opening it because your angle was slightly off?"