View Full Version : Army of Two
Kyonye
2008-03-19, 06:52 AM
Have any of you guys tried this game yet? I like it. It's a fun coop game.
Baneblade
2008-03-19, 12:13 PM
I've seen a preview, but haven't tried it yet...might pick it up on payday.
Giovanni
2008-03-19, 01:35 PM
Liked it.
OneManArmy
2008-03-19, 05:11 PM
its fun with people. way too short. multiplayer adds some replay value, but for me its only when I'm with friends.
Kyonye
2008-03-19, 06:34 PM
I can't really play games anymore, unless I'm playing with friends (there are very few exceptions). I don't play games like I used to, just because of my busy life, so when I play, I'd rather play coop with a friend or two.
Kikinchikin
2008-03-20, 03:59 AM
Thinking about trying it out.
By the way, Frontlines sucks dick. It's like a shitty version of battlefield 1942, only like 4 years late.
Kyonye
2008-03-22, 04:03 PM
Thinking about trying it out.
By the way, Frontlines sucks dick. It's like a shitty version of battlefield 1942, only like 4 years late.
My friend has been talking nonstop about that game. he really wants me to get it, but I am just not interested.
Kikinchikin
2008-03-22, 05:57 PM
If you have played CoD 4 you can't even try to enjoy that game, the mechanics are so poor and it seems so uninvolved.
Kyonye
2008-03-23, 11:36 AM
If you have played CoD 4 you can't even try to enjoy that game, the mechanics are so poor and it seems so uninvolved.
Yeah I play CoD4. Love that game. Too bad Frontlines sucks. It seemed like it could have been a good big server game. Of all the Battlefields I liked Vietnam the most. I would just drive people around and listen to the music.
Hamma
2008-03-24, 06:59 PM
I need to pick up COD4
Giovanni
2008-03-24, 09:31 PM
It be fun.
Rbstr
2008-03-24, 10:15 PM
http://www.penny-arcade.com/images/2008/20080307.jpg
OneManArmy
2008-03-25, 11:53 AM
I never understood why all the critics complained about that.
I personally enjoyed the humor in it. maybe I'm just an asshole though.
Kyonye
2008-03-25, 04:54 PM
I never understood why all the critics complained about that.
I personally enjoyed the humor in it. maybe I'm just an asshole though.
It's because too many people feel it will be taken to reality. It's the same stuff we have been dealing with since games became just a little more violent.
Look at Las Vegas. When Rainbow Six Vegas came out, the city actually complained saying that it would push people away from going to the city because of the "terrorist" activity in the game.
New York City got upset with Rockstar games because they are using the real city in their game. Either they tried to bring a lawsuit on them, or they did. I don't remember.
People have to realize that it will always just be a game. I wouldn't be surprised if someone said Video Games were the cause of World War II. I mean, video games are violent, no?
Giovanni
2008-03-25, 06:44 PM
HITLER PLAYED DUKE-NUKEM!
Hamma
2008-03-25, 07:16 PM
What the heck does that comic even refer to?
Giovanni
2008-03-26, 01:54 PM
You can encourage your partner by pressing the A button next to him. They wind up playing air guitar or fist pouding. You can tell him "WTF!" by pressing the right trigger... and you wind up hitting him.
It's just something they added for flavour...
Sorry if I didn't describe it all that well eh.
Rbstr
2008-03-26, 05:42 PM
It's because too many people feel it will be taken to reality.
No, that is not the reason I take issue with it. Or the writers of Penny Arcade.
I don't take issue with the game at all really. It's fun. But I object to the events and actions in the game.
Your going to have to stick with me on this one:
It's not the levels of violence, it is the glorification thereof.
It is showing that fist bumping is an appropriate action after you've killed a couple dozen people. The game doesn't paint it as ironic or an outcome of a human being's need to cope or show it as social commentary in any way. The game lets us know that the action is Okay.
Video games are gradually becoming an art form and a way of conveying a message. As such we should increasingly judge the medium by artistic standards. Very similarly to how we judge movies or books(and perhaps more so, as the medium can be much more immersive and suggestive) a video game can be examined.
An example we see, in Bioshock, commentary on a number of things (like moral objectivism, Ann Rynd kind of stuff). One thing that might strike you is that, in the end, the reason you've undertaken these actions is that you where asked to. Your actions have been called into question. That is great social commentary. The game has made you think.
Army of two does not present present that kind of depth that Bioshock may, granted. However, we can still judge the actions of the characters on these grounds and call the fist bumping action disturbing.
The reason that army of two strikes me so is not that this attitude toward death and destruction might creep into real life.
It is that it is already present in real life.
We have seen this kind of disregard for violence and suffering often during the past few years. Security and Military Contractors (what a nice way to describe modern mercenaries) have been involved in a number of scandals that have died off rather quietly.
We see it in the constant refusal to ban so called enhanced interrogation, another wonderful euphemism of our time(which in the end does not squeeze information from people. It causes people to make things up.)
Just recently we saw the somewhat lesser, but still despicable, puppy-of-a-cliff video.
I don't see how we, as those with the supposed moral high ground, are okay with these things.
Army of two has managed to bump into this kind of issue inadvertently.
As a movie, Army of Two would fall into the entertaining category, not the good movie category.
Entertainment was it's premise and we can enjoy it as such, but it does contain deeper issues that can be discussed.
Giovanni
2008-03-26, 08:49 PM
Aren't games I don't know? Made for entertainment?
Everywhere I look I see social commentaries. Last thing I need is for my games to give me a moral lesson about how to act as a human being.
Let's face it, 45% of the world has it's head up it's ass for stupid issues like this one. The other 45% is retarded and thinks such behavior is acceptable. A minority of humanity will see it for what it is... fun... that's all it is... just fun...
The day, where everyone understands that a game is made for fun, is unlikely to show it's face.
Rbstr
2008-03-26, 09:31 PM
You don't seem to see what I'm getting at. The one of the first things I say about that game is that I think it's fun.
The fist-bumping issue is not a fault of the game. It's the fault of the characters of the game.
These are valid points for discussion. We can say that these things are wrong, independently of our judgment of the games entertainment value(though this may not hold true for every game, it could be objectionable to the point of stomach turning, but that point would be different for everyone).
At heart are music, novels and movies not made for entertainment, especially originally? The point is that they can contain much more. They don't have to (like most summer blockbusters) and sometimes they inadvertently carry a bit more.
Giovanni
2008-03-27, 11:14 AM
Oh I'm not arguing against you, I'm just saying that critics are digging much too deep to find evil where it should not be found.
After all like I said (and as you said) it's just a game.
Rbstr
2008-03-27, 01:21 PM
Well I am arguing against you. Your position is flawed. It's not just a game(and I didn't say that anywhere), it is a game with a story.
Storytelling, in any of it's forms, has a purpose behind it. If it's goal is entertainment, fine. This does not, however, exclude it from being analyzed.
Why is that that you don't want to think or feel emotion based on a game? Video games can be such a powerful storytelling medium, and yet we most often choose to ignore that.
Army of Two had an excellent opportunity to delve into deeper aspects of the story, and it didn't. Even Halo managed to attempt to portray the actions of the characters in a thoughtful manner(as meh as the attempt was). Being thoughtful does not have to be preachy and take away from that game. Why should we demand less?
Hamma
2008-03-28, 06:58 PM
For once (ever i think) I agree with Gio. :p
Like Oma said, perhaps I am just an asshole :lol:
People take shit too seriously nowadays, this country sucks ass.
Someone says nappy headed ho on the radio and they are hung for it.
Fuck that. :\
Rbstr
2008-03-28, 08:11 PM
I've got two responses, one in relation to not taking games as anything more than entertainment and the other in regard to the seriousness of the real world.
If you for some reason don't like discussing real wold issues, I suggest you stay away from the second part (given this forums anti-political-discussion history).
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If you don't want to discuss a finer point of art that is up up to you. To say that these finer points do not exist is mistaken. To oppose discussion of these points is backwards.
Video Games are reaching the true art threshold. It's not just whacking a little digital ball back and forth anymore. They can contain all of the makings of literature or a painting or art movies or music.
I think part of why we have disconnect here is that you think that I object to the game that contains the action I am opposed to. (who is actually reading my whole posts?)
That is not the case at all:
I found the game fine.
I object to the action itself.
It would have, in my opinion, been a better game for going after the issue.
-----------
You really thing we take things too seriously in this country?
The reasons we have the crises of the modern age is because we didn't take anything seriously enough to give it real thought:
Religious Extremism
Non-renewable energy dependency
Climate Change
China, India and other 3rd world countries Industrializing(The globalization of the 1st world economy that comes along with it)
The national debt
The deregulation of our financial system
A Civil Rights movement that still hasn't found reconciliation
If the populace actually took these things seriously they would be solved.
A bigoted statement: not something to care about?
Fine.
Racism can never be put behind us, ever, when we take that stance.
The short version of section two:
Apathy is just the lazy man's way of maintaining the status quo.
Things don't go away when you don't pay attention to them.
Giovanni
2008-03-29, 12:32 AM
For once (ever i think) I agree with Gio. :p
Like Oma said, perhaps I am just an asshole :lol:
People take shit too seriously nowadays, this country sucks ass.
Someone says nappy headed ho on the radio and they are hung for it.
Fuck that. :
HOLY FUCKING CRAP! Mark the calendar! Oma AND Hamma agreed with me... in a 7 days lapse.
Is this a sign?
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