For The Die Hard Fans
Posted: 29 Nov 2007, 14:33
It's very interesting to read everyone’s opinions on the new game. Some of us love it and others feel its a total waste of time. I feel that EA has widened their audience too much (sounds strange doesn't it). It's gotten to the point where they have a rather wide set of fans to please:
1. Those who were into the first half of the series. Not sure where the divide lies but, let just say Pre-Underground. The era where the focus was on the Supercars on the world. IMO these games were more "simulation" with regard to, well, everything. Cars in the game were as they are rolled off the production line. Physics (for their time) were pretty good; yes you had to brake before a corner. The environment/world was based on real world environments, though this is pretty much they way its been done throughout the series. Pictures, videos and stats of the actual cars in action, something I really miss, and replays too! The early part of the series made me feel more connected to the cars. What made the series great for me was the fact that it gave me a chance to "drive" cars I might never get to see, let alone drive. If I could moralise this part of the series it would be Jeremy Clarkson. Someone all about OE and the pedigree of the worlds sports cars. The kind of person you are not going to find in a Riced up Civic...
I have many friends that are petrol heads and gamers, most of whom have moved away from the series saying, "it's become too arcade". I also find it very interesting that this era was the last we saw of Ferrari, I wonder why...
2. The next set would be those into the "tuner" world. Let's face it, the street racing world has exploded onto the scene in the past couple of years. When a Corsa lines up against a 911 GT2 and beats it, that's when people take notice! I'm a big fan of this industry. I frequent racing of all sorts as much as I can and bringing this genre into the NFS series appealed to me very much when it was introduced.
Before ProStreet launched I ran a boxart competition here in the forums. Basically, you had to design a cover for the next instalment of the NFS series. Interesting to see that many people who entered went for the "Underground" theme game. The main reason I did the competition was to try and see what NFS fans would like from the series if given carte blanche on which direction they would like to see the game heading. So clearly "Underground 3" was where EA should have headed. So have they headed in the right direction? Seems like opinions are all over the place...
It is interesting to me to see videos as the one linked below popping up. In many ways I'm not surprised. As much at I love the series the video demonstrates that EA cannot cater for the fan base they created over the years.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHFM-YU-5HA
I'm not saying that the introduction of street racing to the series is a bad one but, the views expressed by those who have played ProSreet suggest that EA is now alienating its Street racing audience as it did the generation of fans Pre-Underground.
One could look at the NFS series as being "of the time" i.e. what embodied the term "Need for Speed" for that particular year in 1995, 1999 or in 2003. If that was EA's approach then they did a good job of bringing "what’s hot and happening" to my PC. On the other hand one could view this as a marketing approach that, although brought in the coin, left the die hard fans feeling a bit forgotten.
I’ve been playing the series from the first NFS. I own them all and have clocked them all. I pretty much grew up on the series from age 10. To be honest I am more of a fan of the earlier versions but, when you are loyal to a series for so long, you don’t just abandon it 6 or so titles down the line. In end I understand we can't all have what we want from the series. I'd just like to see a bit more consistency from EA. I mean, how many games can rival 13 years of a series of games that pretty much set the benchmark each year!? Yet, from what I read in the forums you'd swear the series was still finding it feet...
I started this thread not to say "what should the next NFS be" but, rather to gain insight into what other fans of the series think of its general progression through the years...
1. Those who were into the first half of the series. Not sure where the divide lies but, let just say Pre-Underground. The era where the focus was on the Supercars on the world. IMO these games were more "simulation" with regard to, well, everything. Cars in the game were as they are rolled off the production line. Physics (for their time) were pretty good; yes you had to brake before a corner. The environment/world was based on real world environments, though this is pretty much they way its been done throughout the series. Pictures, videos and stats of the actual cars in action, something I really miss, and replays too! The early part of the series made me feel more connected to the cars. What made the series great for me was the fact that it gave me a chance to "drive" cars I might never get to see, let alone drive. If I could moralise this part of the series it would be Jeremy Clarkson. Someone all about OE and the pedigree of the worlds sports cars. The kind of person you are not going to find in a Riced up Civic...
I have many friends that are petrol heads and gamers, most of whom have moved away from the series saying, "it's become too arcade". I also find it very interesting that this era was the last we saw of Ferrari, I wonder why...
2. The next set would be those into the "tuner" world. Let's face it, the street racing world has exploded onto the scene in the past couple of years. When a Corsa lines up against a 911 GT2 and beats it, that's when people take notice! I'm a big fan of this industry. I frequent racing of all sorts as much as I can and bringing this genre into the NFS series appealed to me very much when it was introduced.
Before ProStreet launched I ran a boxart competition here in the forums. Basically, you had to design a cover for the next instalment of the NFS series. Interesting to see that many people who entered went for the "Underground" theme game. The main reason I did the competition was to try and see what NFS fans would like from the series if given carte blanche on which direction they would like to see the game heading. So clearly "Underground 3" was where EA should have headed. So have they headed in the right direction? Seems like opinions are all over the place...
It is interesting to me to see videos as the one linked below popping up. In many ways I'm not surprised. As much at I love the series the video demonstrates that EA cannot cater for the fan base they created over the years.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHFM-YU-5HA
I'm not saying that the introduction of street racing to the series is a bad one but, the views expressed by those who have played ProSreet suggest that EA is now alienating its Street racing audience as it did the generation of fans Pre-Underground.
One could look at the NFS series as being "of the time" i.e. what embodied the term "Need for Speed" for that particular year in 1995, 1999 or in 2003. If that was EA's approach then they did a good job of bringing "what’s hot and happening" to my PC. On the other hand one could view this as a marketing approach that, although brought in the coin, left the die hard fans feeling a bit forgotten.
I’ve been playing the series from the first NFS. I own them all and have clocked them all. I pretty much grew up on the series from age 10. To be honest I am more of a fan of the earlier versions but, when you are loyal to a series for so long, you don’t just abandon it 6 or so titles down the line. In end I understand we can't all have what we want from the series. I'd just like to see a bit more consistency from EA. I mean, how many games can rival 13 years of a series of games that pretty much set the benchmark each year!? Yet, from what I read in the forums you'd swear the series was still finding it feet...
I started this thread not to say "what should the next NFS be" but, rather to gain insight into what other fans of the series think of its general progression through the years...