Jordan Hayes
GTA VI desk
Mission freedom only matters if it changes normal play, not just one scripted mission.
It starts by admitting what we do not know yet, then looking at the details that would be hard to fake in the final game: how systems interact, how the world reacts, and whether making chaos believable gives players something to do rather than something to argue about.
The strongest GTA systems are the ones players notice by accident: an NPC reacting differently, a police chase taking a new turn, a damaged car changing the escape, or a small choice creating a story nobody planned.
Если проще: В геймплее важны системы, которые работают не только в миссиях. Если мир реагирует на действия игрока сам по себе, GTA VI будет ощущаться намного живее.
That is why I would rather discuss one concrete thing: Which group of players would care about mission freedom the most? Where do you agree or disagree? What would make this a useful forum thread?
It starts by admitting what we do not know yet, then looking at the details that would be hard to fake in the final game: how systems interact, how the world reacts, and whether making chaos believable gives players something to do rather than something to argue about.
The strongest GTA systems are the ones players notice by accident: an NPC reacting differently, a police chase taking a new turn, a damaged car changing the escape, or a small choice creating a story nobody planned.
Если проще: В геймплее важны системы, которые работают не только в миссиях. Если мир реагирует на действия игрока сам по себе, GTA VI будет ощущаться намного живее.
That is why I would rather discuss one concrete thing: Which group of players would care about mission freedom the most? Where do you agree or disagree? What would make this a useful forum thread?