I usually play games on "normal" difficulty these days, for a balanced challenge. However, I don't particularly enjoy boss fights, or at least I don't enjoy the extra challenge associated with them. Was thinking it would be nice if games had a separate setting so I could just set boss fights to "easy", while not making the rest of the game less challenging as well.

  • cabbagee@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I've come to firmly believe that all games should have an invulnerability setting for the sake of accessibility. It's probably one of the easier settings to implement for most games and it would have the most impact for the wide range of accessibility needs out there.

    • teft@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      I like Jedi: Survivor’s method of accessibility. They let you slow down the game if you need a little more leeway with the bosses. You can crank that slider down to like 10% speed and it’s like being Neo in that scene where he dodges bullets. You can still fuck up but it’s pretty easy. I used it for the platforming because I hate platforming so much.

      • cabbagee@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Control for me! It was mind blowing. Not a difficult game but it really improved my ability to enjoy the game at some points.

      • cabbagee@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        If it's pvp then sure it's cheating but why would it be cheating for a single player game? Isn't the point to have fun?

        • papabobolious@feddit.nu
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          1 year ago

          I mean this has been in games for a long time between the 90s and 00s and has always been called literally cheat codes

        • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Anything that circumvents the design of the game to gain an advantage is technically cheating. I wasn't necessarily saying it shouldn't be there. Just pointing out, there is usually a wat to do it in most games. The devs have to have a way to test things and move the stories forward without playing hundreds of hours of game.

              • bogdugg@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                Maybe you've read it before and you want to skip to the good parts. Maybe it's non-fiction and you're only interested in something specific. Maybe there are parts of the story that make you uncomfortable, but you're enjoying it overall. Maybe a page is missing. Maybe it's an abridged version and it's not up to you, that's just what was available.

                And to the original point, what of translations? Maybe the original author is dead, and somebody translated their book. Are you 'circumventing' the author's original intent to 'gain an advantage'? I mean, yes. Does that mean you're 'cheating'?

                What about audio books? Was the book intended to be read on a page? Are you cheating by having the book read to you?

                Calling these things 'cheating' is silly and unnecessarily loaded, and they assume that the goal of a work is completion. That the only reason you would start a thing is to finish it. I don't believe that's the case for any art. One might say that the challenge in a game is the point, but that's only sometimes true, and challenge is relative. If something comes naturally easier to you, is it 'cheating' to use mods to make the game more difficult, because you're gaining the advantage of improving your experience, against the original intent of the game? I don't think so, so I don't see why it is any different the other way around.

                To think about it another way: if you subtract that paragraph from that book, does it cease to be a book? No, it's just a different book, and that can still have value to people. You're not 'cheating', you are making a new experience for yourself.

                I could go on and on so I'm gonna stop myself here.