Lens flare was way too prominent in Vice City, sometimes it got so bad I couldn't see where I was driving.General_Norris wrote:This. They first put it on GTA if you looked with a certain angle but now you see it ALL TH E FRICKING TIME! IT'S ANNOYING!MrPopo wrote:Oh, and when are they going to stop putting in lens flare on first person games? How many times have you looked up around the sun and had a lens flare on your cornea?
3D games that are aging very well
- futuramaguy42
- 32-bit
- Posts: 240
- Joined: Fri Oct 10, 2008 11:12 pm
Re: 3D games that are aging very well
Re: 3D games that are aging very well
I don't know about the Xbox versions (I recall the PC version looked decent), but all GTA 3 games look dreadful on the PS2 anyway.
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RyaNtheSlayA
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 9201
- Joined: Fri Mar 14, 2008 4:56 pm
- Location: Denver CO, USA
Re: 3D games that are aging very well
Tempest 2000
Spyro the Dragon
Croc
Rez
Mario 64
Any 3D game that isn't realistic, keeps it simple, and has decent camera controls can go on this list. These are the ones I feel will hold up for a long time.
Spyro the Dragon
Croc
Rez
Mario 64
Any 3D game that isn't realistic, keeps it simple, and has decent camera controls can go on this list. These are the ones I feel will hold up for a long time.
Older. Not wiser.
Re: 3D games that are aging very well
I know,I was playing GTA:San Andreas and the Sun was in my eye! I wish the PS2 version looked as good as the Xbox version,it's still a great game and pretty long too.General_Norris wrote:This. They first put it on GTA if you looked with a certain angle but now you see it ALL TH E FRICKING TIME! IT'S ANNOYING!MrPopo wrote:Oh, and when are they going to stop putting in lens flare on first person games? How many times have you looked up around the sun and had a lens flare on your cornea?
Systems: Sega Dreamcast(x2), Sega Genesis(x2), Sega Saturn, Sega CD, Genmobile (portable Genesis), FC Twin, PSX, PS2(x2), GBA, SP, Xbox 360, N64, Showcase Arcade
Re: 3D games that are aging very well
MDK 2
"To preserve biological diversity, is an investment in immortality."