Video about it.
I don’t see many people hopping on warthogs together, or staying close together that much. I always find my self losing to a team who does.
Video about it.
I don’t see many people hopping on warthogs together, or staying close together that much. I always find my self losing to a team who does.
> IS THERE EVEN GOOD TEAM WORK ANYMORE?
> I don’t see many people hopping on warthogs together, or staying close together that much. I always find my self losing to a team who does.
I believe you just answered your own question.
The fact that people rarely use mics past the first week of a game’s launch contributes to the problem. Luckily I have a few friends that still play and we are always talking. I miss when Xbox Live first came out. I remember playing MechAssault and EVERYONE used a mic.
Playing is solo, like I do 99% of the time on a game like WZFF can be tough. I always start off using a mic but, end up taking it after the first round since 8-9 times outta 10 the rest of the team is in a party or just not using them. It is a thing of beauty though when you get on a random team of people who know what they’re doing with or without mics.
People who don’t know each other are less likely to work together, it’s human nature.
I believe that it’s also likely that the popularization of video games has lead to a much more casual approach to gaming, where the average gamer just wants to do their own thing (almost nobody uses game chat anymore).
I don’t think we’ll ever see the level of camaraderie we saw around Halo 3, simply because gaming is now the number one form of entertainment.
Communities were united and gamers were mostly of a similar demographic (back when girl gamers were considered an oddity), but now every man and his dog (and his dog’s dog) are knocking a few hours a day out on their console of choice.
I think the lack of cooperation is directly tied to gaming becoming victim of its own success. There’s a much broader range of people playing games nowadays and the good guy / girl teammates are just a drop of water in the ocean now.
Ah, maybe I’m reading way into this…
Edit: Aw man, Mech Assault was amazing. Uziel for the win!
> 2533274810001991;5:
> People who don’t know each other are less likely to work together, it’s human nature.
>
> I believe that it’s also likely that the popularization of video games has lead to a much more casual approach to gaming, where the average gamer just wants to do their own thing (almost nobody uses game chat anymore).
>
> I don’t think we’ll ever see the level of camaraderie we saw around Halo 3, simply because gaming is now the number one form of entertainment.
>
> Communities were united and gamers were mostly of a similar demographic (back when girl gamers were considered an oddity), but now every man and his dog (and his dog’s dog) are knocking a few hours a day out on their console of choice.
>
> I think the lack of cooperation is directly tied to gaming becoming victim of its own success. There’s a much broader range of people playing games nowadays and the good guy / girl teammates are just a drop of water in the ocean now.
>
> Ah, maybe I’m reading way into this…
>
> Edit: Aw man, Mech Assault was amazing. Uziel for the win!
No… Madcat w/ lvl 3 PPCs! Then Atlas. Then Uziel. Miss that game so much.
I’ll always jump into someone’s hog. And bunching up is sometimes bad.
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Idk with my friends and clan mates, the teamwork is real!