I rarely even finish the main part these days. There just aren’t that many games that can hold my attention for the time they take to beat. Especially since I just don’t have as much time, as I get older, so beating a big narrative game could take months.
What's your opinion on post-game content? do you do it? or are you done with the game when the credits roll?
Submitted 11 hours ago by early_riser@lemmy.world to games@lemmy.world
Comments
horse@feddit.org 1 hour ago
bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de 10 hours ago
Depends on the game now, doesn’t it? I did 100 % of all content on Spider-Man. For some reason I didn’t finish Spider-Man: Miles Morales and I didn’t even start Spider-Man 2.
Hmm, maybe I should at least try Spider-Man 2. But I’d have to finish Miles Morales first to get the full story. Spider-Man 1 was so good, maybe I’ll play that again. Spider-Man
What were we talking about?
MisshapenDeviate@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 hours ago
As somebody who enjoys all 3 games immensely, you don’t strictly have to play Miles Morales. You’ll be missing some of his character growth that continues throughout 2, but a lot of the broad strokes you can pick up from context.
That said, I highly recommend playing Miles Morales.
mushroommunk@lemmy.today 10 hours ago
Seconded. You don’t need to have played Miles Morales at all, but I personally think it’s the best story of the three
Sabin10@lemmy.world 9 hours ago
I haven’t done 100% on any of those, I burned out on them around the 90% mark. All three games are great, you should play them.
mushroommunk@lemmy.today 10 hours ago
It’s got to be one hell of a game for me to do it. Maybe one in 100 will I touch post game content and I don’t think I’ve finished any
ergonomic_importer@piefed.ca 10 hours ago
Outer Wilds, for example, is a game you can only play once.
That has not stopped me from downloading a randomizer mod to squeeze more hours out of it.
early_riser@lemmy.world 9 hours ago
Been sitting on this one for over a year. I really enjoyed Tunic, and it seems Outer Wilds is a similar experience, relying on the player not knowing what’s coming.
Weirdfish@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
Still haven’t played this one through, just downloaded it for like the third time.
I don’t know why it hasn’t hooked me, it’s just the sort of game I should enjoy.
Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world 9 hours ago
Usually once I hit the end, I hold on to see if finishing the game opened up anything new to investigate.
Some games it’s hard to tell where “the end” is.
Borderlands 2 required finishing the story twice before you could BEGIN the end game.
As I get older, I care less about doing EVERYTHING.
silverchase@sh.itjust.works 6 hours ago
Path of Exile runs credits at the end of act 3, but the whole campaign goes to act 10. And soon after that, you receive the quest line that leads to the game’s famously vast endgame. The endgame is what Path of Exile fans play for.
QuadratureSurfer@piefed.social 10 hours ago
Depends on the game, depends on the content.
For example, Skyrim, I could easily continue playing (or just ignore most of the main storyline).
Compared to something like Assassins Creed 1, where any “additional content” would be the most boring/repetitive task. I was done with this as soon as the credits rolled.
Agrivar@lemmy.world 9 hours ago
Does Skyrim even have an ending? Like, a roll credits and play music ending? (I’ve got ~10k hours in that game and I can’t say that I’ve ever “finished” it!)
HubertManne@piefed.social 9 hours ago
Im one of those folks who tend to not finish games. I sorta actively avoid the ending if there is more side quests that I have not done and such.
carotte@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 hours ago
i think it depends on the game, imo post-game stuff is especially cool in sandbox-y games where there’s many things to do, whereas games that are more linear don’t really need it
but what i hate more than anything is a game that won’t acknowledge you finished it. credits roll, you load your save and you’re back in front of the final boss. i hate that, it makes me feel like the game is in a perpetual state of never being completed. at least put a pretty medal on my save file or something
DamienGramatacus@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
Completely agree. It’s a very immersion breaking move. Looking at you, Cyberpunk.
Multiplexer@discuss.tchncs.de 9 hours ago
Currently playing Morrowind.
Had to even remind myself recently to do some main quest for a change.Completely and immersively lost myself in sidequests before. :-)
Sooo… post-game-content seems to be just game content here…
balgruuf@nord.pub 10 hours ago
Depends on the game. Often post-game there’s just a checklist of chores and I’m not doing that.
Pika@sh.itjust.works 8 hours ago
I treat postgame content the same as I treat new game+
It’s super unlikely I will look into it unless the game rocked my world.
Many games treat post game content as a grindfest for people who really liked the game but didn’t want it to end, I usually have no interest in it.
The last games I looked into both NG+ and post game content on was final fantasy XV and God of War (the ps4 one), and I didn’t finish either of them.
TrojanRoomCoffeePot@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Always, always, always. Ever since beating my first game in ‘93, Kirby’s Adventure (NES), I’ve watched the full credits every time that I finish a game. It might be the only time that I ever see the developer’s and other miscellaneous team members’ names, and I want to know who they were, having just dedicated 30-1000+ hours to their labour of love.
Katana314@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
I remember a game called Outriders; it was a little bit of a generic RPG-shooter with abilities and a dismally apocalyptic world. I played through it, I enjoyed the campaign, but I was confused because many reviews were lamenting how “The postgame is terrible and it’s lacking content”. I didn’t really understand the point, since I just enjoyed the base elements.
I identify a bit more with Breath of the Wild’s lampshading of 100% completion, where they reward you for stumbling across a significant number of these things to find, but only hand you a golden turd for getting “ALL” of them.
bigchungus@piefed.blahaj.zone 6 hours ago
I’m one to buy the version of the game with all of the DLC and never open it again after the credits roll.
Malix@sopuli.xyz 10 hours ago
Entirely up to the game & how interesting the post-game stuff is.
I have 100%'s eg. Batman: Arkham Asylum (on normal, not gonna try-hard it). The amount of collectibles was within the toleranse and it was fairly fun to hunt the items with the hints provided.
Now, few years forward with Arkham City and Arkham Knight? Hard nope. Too many collectibles/activities/timewasters, stupendously huge areas, too obscure hints, nah, nopety-nope-nope. And the good ending in AK was tied to finishing “optional activities” which I just could not be bothered with, watched the ending on youtube and uninstalled.
Diablo-likes I can grind for hundreds, if not thousands of hours, as the “click go brrrr, get item of +1 betterness” after campaign is fun for surprisingly long periods for me. But at the moment I have the problem that I have pretty much played all of the available ones.
dogslayeggs@lemmy.world 4 hours ago
I played the Hogwarts game and beat the final boss or whatever?? I don’t remember now because it was rather forgettable. Anyway, the gameplay itself was pretty fun with casting spells and stuff, so I kept playing after the main quest was complete. I started doing some of the side achievements like solving all the Merlin puzzles and performing specific spell attack combos. Then I looked into what some of the achievements actually required and noped out fast. Turned off the game and never looked back. Some were crazy things like “perform this 4 spell attack combo on a group of 3 people with at least one rogue… 10 times.” Or “find all 86 hidden carrots in Hogwarts,” which even if I could find a tutorial walk through on that I wouldn’t which ones I’d already found and would have to go step by step. That’s awful design.
Then there are games like Elden Ring or Ghosts of Tsushima where I played post-credits A LOT.
kahjtheundedicated@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
If it was a really great game and I’m not ready for it to be over, I’ll play the post-game until I’m out of content or over it. Mostly jrpg’s
Coelacanth@feddit.nu 8 hours ago
For me it mostly depends on what the ending of the main story is like, and how invested I was in the narrative. If I was really invested and the game ended in a satisfying way my overwhelming impulse tends to be to immediately uninstall. A kind of “snapping the finished book shut and placing it on the bookshelf” thing that is satisfying in and of itself.
gegil@sopuli.xyz 10 hours ago
It depends. If it some kind of side quests, additional events or cut-scenes, then it may be worth playing for past main campaign. If its just some weird achievements or collection completion, then i will not do it.
DarkFuture@lemmy.world 3 hours ago
Depends on the game.
One thing I usually won’t do is reinstall a game to play content added later.