I was there on that fateful day, were you?
For the right price, yes. They're fun romps. Not particularly deep - I actually own all of the DVD versions and they're flat-out frustrating in parts - but they are fun to play. I went through Dragon's Lair 1 and 2 with a bud of mine, took us about 2-3 hours each and we had a pretty fun time playing them. Replay value? Very little. Gameplay? Minimal and sometimes frustrating. But they are a fun experience due to the sheer personality they have and the entertaining cutscenes. Hence the $20 price point I recommend them for.Kupek wrote:Man, just when I thought I had you figured out. You think experiences that, in modern terminology, are one long Active Time Event are worth $20?
Sorry, the bitches ate them all. I'd be made and have them assassinate each other but man, they gots some sweet asses! :-)Eric wrote:I figured out that you secretly want world domination, and you have an army of spicy vixens that carry out assassinations, now where's my cookie?!
Which is exactly why $20 for 3 games that'll take you about 3-4 hours each to get through is worth it (that's about what it took for each Dragon's Lair 1 and 2 for us). That's 9-12 hours of entertainment value for a relatively good price. The fact that there isn't much gameplay in there (almost nil) means the sole value you're getting is the production value and entertainment from the cutscenes. That's why it's only worth $20 instead of the $60 that a great FPS sells for. Still fun and entertaining but not nearly as much there. I never complained about that much for Modern Warfare 2 (took me about 12 or 13 hours to beat it on Veteran and the same for Veteran Spec Ops; I don't play online multi in that game) but it also gave a lot more to the value proposition than the Digital Leisure games do.Kupek wrote:Zeus, I figured there was very little game there. And I figured they were a few hours entertainment with no replay value, and you've often stated those reasons why saying something isn't worth even $15.