I had the chance to talk to Nolan North at a con, and he said that Captain Walker was undoubtedly his most "underrated" role in terms of fan recognition. He told me he thinks about his work on that game at least once a week.
@Skeletons_Riding_Ostriches9 ай бұрын
He's also Merasmus. But yeah, if we don't preserve this game Nolan's art will cease to exist.
@elcobra989 ай бұрын
@@Skeletons_Riding_OstrichesHUZZAH!
@nuclearcommando97299 ай бұрын
The next time I see him at a convention I was going to talk to him about it. Last time I saw him I didn't know if he'd be interested in talking about it, only for me to read later that it's always an interesting conversation with him when it's brought up. He did a great job on Walker in the story. His voice acting really sold it.
@backtoklondike9 ай бұрын
For me, Walker is his best work. Like Nathan Drake is going to be his prominent role and I don't it's bad that people will always think of him as Drake, nor do I think he is unhappy that's what people approch him for. But his work as Walker to me is just great voice acting, it should be up there with some of the great acting period. Like I sometimes forgot that was Nolan North voicing him even though he doesn't even change his voice that much because he just disappears in that role.
@nachro21909 ай бұрын
When you think about what he went through, how his voice was coarse by the end due to having recorded all the lines back to back so he could really feel the character's exhaustion by the end. I'd definitely remember that shit, its like the Heavy Metal Choir for the DOOM Eternal OST, you don't forget being part of something like that
@leonc97609 ай бұрын
“Expiring licenses” are 2 words that make me fear for the eventual digital only distribution of video games as we’ve witnessed game publishers and the big console creators do not care about preserving their own art……all other forms of art are preserved for future generations to enjoy but not games for some reason
@TheCyberSpidey9 ай бұрын
And most of these expiring licenses are music licenses. It's almost as if Devolver or some other Indie giant (not Sony, Microsoft or Nintendo; ESPECIALLY NOT SONY - they already have a massive record label) should start a music label and offer more permissive terms so that games don't disappear 5 or 10 years post launch, whilst musicians still get compensated fairly for licensing their work.
@LuizAlexPhoenix9 ай бұрын
Games are not yet treated like most cultural objects of art. They should be sent to national archives and libraries, much like books and movies. Also, copyright law should be adjusted to allow distribution and emulation of abandoned games whose legal purchase ceased to be possible. It would allow both governments and people to preserve and access these works. Unfortunately, this requires that the gaming community unites around it. Since the community has been often coopted into far right culture wars, anti government and pro corporation talking points, it's a very tough idea to implement. As it requires political and organizational work, the only solution for normal people is to spread awareness. Hopefully, someone influential will pick up on it and won't be drowned out by said pro capital positions.
@GIVEUPYOURMILK9 ай бұрын
I'm not sure how it is on Playstation or Steam, but on Xbox, when a game gets delisted, it stays in the store. You just can't buy it, unless you get your hands on a code for the game. And if you bought it you can install it whenever you want. I own several delisted games at this point.
@akiraigarashi28749 ай бұрын
@@GIVEUPYOURMILKYeah Spec Ops is still in my library
@PetitTasdeBoue9 ай бұрын
One day the servers will be oversaturated so they probably won't allow this anymore because of the lack of space... people tend to forgot data is not weightless and it's increasing in numbers at incredible speed ever year... data centers do cost a fortune in electricity too because you need computers running H24 with low temperatures so they don't crash (so permanent air conditioning which is also quite expensive) But yeah for now you can still download all the games delisted you already own on steam (unless it need servers which got closed by the publishers, steam has nothing to do with that tho)
@kford92719 ай бұрын
One of my favorite memories of this game was after the terrible phosphorous scene, I played the next few missions. I wasn't really paying attention because my mind was still on how I and my team just murdered a bunch of civilians. I was just playing like a zombie, going through the motions. My roommate walked in and says "Oh, you're playing another hero war game? Whatever...", and just walks to her room. Then a loading screen pops up as I had just finished a scene. And written on the bottom of the screen was "Do you feel like a hero yet?" The first time a game had ever successfully taunted me. I turned off the game and went outside for a walk.
@lykonic17639 ай бұрын
Yeah I probably would have done the same thing in that circumstance. The timing of just having done the WP scene, your roommate unknowingly referring to it as just "a hero war game", and then the game itself taunting you... I think I would have taken a walk in the woods to try and stave off existential crisis. A bit of hyperbole, but it would definitely have me thinking deeply about what just happened. Also I kinda hope that you eventually shared the real hidden message behind the game with that roommate, purely because I think that this game has a message and meta-plot worth sharing. It really is such a unique game, and I think more people need to be made aware of it. Hit Start here on YT also made a video about the game, mostly going over the plot and how the turnaround from war game to psychological thriller/horror makes it possibly one of the most disturbing "war games" of all time. That's where I first even learned about the game, and even without playing it myself, it's been sticking with me for a while now - and I'm still not sure exactly what I feel when I think about it too much. I just know it's an important piece of media, and it did it's job flawlessly. I do indeed feel *something,* even without playing it. I just can't make sense of the feeling it evokes.
@TheCyberSpidey9 ай бұрын
It gets even worse. WP scene is visually horrible, but you're somewhat detached from the violence (through the mortar's display, which reflects your face as you do it). In a subsequent mission, you're trying to secure a water tanker - in a city that has no functional civilian architecture left, and you end up spilling all that water dooming the survivors to thirst. I genuinely felt guilty about playing FPS (especially because of how much I loved Battlefield 3 at the time) after this game. It's a shame that it's no longer on sale; it needs to be preserved but I doubt 2K would fork the cash to renew licenses (music probably?), Yager is close to folding as well sadly.
@AstralApparently9 ай бұрын
That's just... divine intervention.
@jordank2499 ай бұрын
I absolutely love that the game hated its audience, the genre it was in, and the power fantasy that the genre thrived on. That WP scene is the perfect example of its anger towards all three, using those elements to set up an unquestioned war crime in the guise of said fantasy.
@LeMicronaut9 ай бұрын
I'd imagine the devs/writers would really like to hear that story. It's like a distillation of the unwelcomed homecoming of soldiers from any unpopular war. It's unfortunate that the game's lost its element of surprise and anyone who "enlists" knows about the war crimes they're destined to commit. People know more about what can go wrong nowadays, but you still have to assume this optimism that you'll be in the right place at the right time. Getting a bad draw and feeling "lied to" about what happens and being disgusted by the disconnect with oblivious politicians and stubborn commanding officers is kind of the cherry on top.
@thepaintingbanjo88949 ай бұрын
You make a movie, you pay for a licensed song, and the movie gets to live forever. You make a video game, you pay for a licensed song, and it's only a matter of time before it's scrubbed off the internet. None of this bullshit is fair. This is exactly why people pirate everything.
@wallyhackenslacker9 ай бұрын
@@SimuLord I don't really agree about your point on live service games. These games are the bane of videogame preservation, and that fact I imagine is a small yet existing consideration among many for why AAA studios are so into live services despite their bad reputation.
@arsenii_yavorskyi9 ай бұрын
@@SimuLord the difference between a "live service game" and a normal game is that the latter can still be played by those who own it (and those who pirate it), whereas the former is destroyed COMPLETELY and PERMANENTLY for EVERYONE.
@PopcornMax1799 ай бұрын
Videogame companies either just didn't expect they could be still selling their games years after release, or that an audience would still exist. Not so long ago there was no high speed internet. Games had a run for manufacturing, marketing and distribution and that was it. Same for movies. Is a small media broadcaster going to bother pay for storing and preserving broadcasts just because one day some people might be interested in watching them?
@alexandrejude13069 ай бұрын
Not necessarily forever in case of movies (or TV shows). Quite often the movie studio is part of a larger media group that already own the distributing rights for said music. Also, they own rights for hundreds of thousands of music tracks at a time, where in the case of video games devs need to get a license for each track they use, and they don't necessarily have enough money to keep these deals for ever. But quite often even for the movies there could be a few years deal with the rights owner, just like with video games. Most of the time it's no big deal and nobody is aware of it because nobody buys or rent the movie anymore from an official resseller and production of the physical version has stopped years ago. If they do need to keep the movie available for VODs or SVODs for exemple, even they re-licence the music or they go on the edit table and swap the soundtrack. In the case of the video game, you would need to access the source code which can be tricky depending on the game) and licence another music in its place.
@Henrik_Holst9 ай бұрын
Well those movies that carry such licensed music often costs hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars to make, meanwhile the budget for this game was most likely way less than that.
@OldShatterham9 ай бұрын
The way media can just be made unavailable (at least via official means) is disconcerting. It once again shows that preservation, even in legal grey areas, is important.
@drakep.58579 ай бұрын
All art in this world has a right to exist and be seen, and when we allow companies and governments to just remove that stuff from existence, that's something that can truly destroy and malnourish the free flow of information
@mechanicalmonk20209 ай бұрын
@@drakep.5857 does art that the artist wishes to be destroyed have a right to exist and be seen?
@littlehorn00639 ай бұрын
yeah, cuz fuck that artist in particular. Preservation is preservation, even if it means going against the intention. I guess it could be done... somewhat ceremoniously (eh?). Release an archived version 1-10 years after the author's death / end of the project, all of the sudden, without announcing it (but with the permission of those who is mentioned in the piece, if any). If somebody wants to do that kind of thing, then they shouldn't ever consider posting it on the Net, or sharing it with anyone who could post it on the Net. Unus Annus' biggest mistake is creating the project on the Internet. If they shared CD-disks, casette tapes, or made it Patreon-or-othet-support platform-only, it would've somewhat achieved their intention. Maybe. I guess. I don't even know what the intention was, to be fair Maybe the time has passed for this kind of stuff
@argfasdfgadfgasdfgsdfgsdfg63519 ай бұрын
I'm thinking about maybe they could just sell it on their own website? Steam doesn't have any licensing.
@matthewjones67869 ай бұрын
@@mechanicalmonk2020 That's a good question. My instinct is to follow "death of the artist" rules and say it has a right to exist no matter what, but I'm sure there are a lot of scenarios that would make me question that... I think my main point is that the Star Wars Holiday Special should exist no matter how much George regrets it. xD
@R909-s9d9 ай бұрын
I've played Spec Ops : The Line when it came out. I was 20, and I had the idea that I could write a book about a civil war for water in a Dubai covered in sand after disastrous sandstorms. So when I saw that the game set up was exactly what I had in mine i bought it, just to see what they did with it. And I do believe that this game, that left me with such a sense of awe and dread by the end did actually deeply modify my perception of what I was playing. It did make me realize how much people I was killing in Assassin's Creed, how much detachment I had regarding killing humans in video game and etc. As I continued to grow up It became genuinely hard for me not to feel a bit disgusted by some titles, and it oriented my choices of game towards way more family friendly titles. Actually, now that I think about it, Spec Ops : The Line is in fact the last military shooter I ever played. It didn't happened overnight like I had some kind of holy revelation, but yeah Spec Ops : The Line did revolutionize my personnal approach toward the medium and what I looked for in video games.
@raph25509 ай бұрын
Same experience, but with Undertale. Now I long for a game where I can play a good guy. but for real
@hichemfantar19659 ай бұрын
@@raph2550you’re already living that game. There’s nothing better than being good to the people around you.
@raph25509 ай бұрын
@@hichemfantar1965 Sure but I want dragons, and the ability to have a victory
@R909-s9d9 ай бұрын
You should definitely try Psychonaut 1 & 2 then, the story of the two games revolve around healing self and other, and they are great action/plateforme games, very wholesome ! :) @@raph2550
@balinthehater82059 ай бұрын
I have to disagree with you, which is healthy in my opinion because this is art and people take away different things from it. For me the entire game fell flat. I went into it years after release and I was told by people that I would have my views challenged and it would make me think. Instead I was mostly left frustrated as the game forgot entirely that for cause and effect to be impactful you yourself have to be the cause for whatever happened. Instead of raging at myself for making bad calls, I was raging against the game for forcing me to make those calls because it simply would not progress otherwise. It was such a missed opportunity from making a game where you could and most likely would fuck up and thus reflect on your own actions to making one where I seriously questioned the sanity of the game Devs.
@celambor9 ай бұрын
I remember vividly this game, not for the phosphore scene but for a gameplay moment You just went through a long and exhausting gun fight, you're walking in a corridor then suddenly something moves and sprints towards you. You shoot, it drops dead, and your teammates start yelling "what are you doing ?". You just shot a civilian. Not in a cutscenes, you're the one who pulled the trigger I honestly had to take a pause after this moment because it was so brilliantly done I felt at a small scale how civilian's casualties can happen
@nathankurtz80459 ай бұрын
In some games, that would cause an instant failure and make you play again
9 ай бұрын
I got in a discussion with a student at the time and my initial standpoint was that did not "like" the game. We kept talking and I described the exact scenario you just described. From calm to startled to the cleanest headshot I've ever pulled off in a video game. However, I reloaded the save. I found it unfair to have accidentilly killed a civilian. And that's when the person I was talking with remarked that the game never was intended to be fun and that I had played it as it had been playing me. My mind was forever blown. I sometimes find myself thinking about the game in general, the inciting incident in particular, but especially the conversation that added to my understanding of games as a very, _very_ capable medium.
@pufthemajicdragon9 ай бұрын
Detroit broke me with a scene like that. Searching for a rogue android, finding them, chasing after them, getting into a fistfight, I pick up a gun - and the adrenaline and the urgency and the tension are ratcheted up so high.... - *I* pulled the trigger. I realized that if pushed far enough I could... pull the trigger. It was a harsh look in the mirror and I didn't like what I saw. I still haven't recovered from that. But what I think makes it worse... I *knew* what I was doing. I wasn't manipulated into it by some disembodied voice on a radio, I wasn't shooting at a sudden shadow. I was looking that android in the eyes and I pulled the trigger.
@lunch_trey9 ай бұрын
I had forgotten about that! I remember I pulled the trigger so fast and thought "Oh shit. I wasn't supposed to do that, was I?" and expected a GAME OVER screen... but the game kept going.
@CaptainWoggy9 ай бұрын
There's an article out there written by Jacob Geller about that exact moment (youtube doesn't like sharing links, so just google "Five years of guilt with Spec Ops: The Line" on Cane and Rinse), and its also the moment that stuck with me. The white phosphorous scene is so overwrought and melodramatic that it barely left an impact, but that woman running out in terror and getting shot... that's something I actually did do, and it actually had an impact on me. The WP stuff always came off as the game thinking it was saying something rather than actually saying something. It's memorable because of the spectacle
@JorganGJorgan9 ай бұрын
Do they want us to pirate games or something?
@Zeithri9 ай бұрын
They want us to forget about games so they can resell them for 60$ in the future.
@kazaakas9 ай бұрын
Been feeling the same about movies and TV series tbh. I'd need 10 different subscriptions and then still risk not being able to watch the thing that I want. I stopped pirating in the early 2010s, but lately I had to to watch specific 70s, 80s, and 90s movies.
@YourPalKindred9 ай бұрын
I certainly do! It's morally correct!
@Spooglecraft9 ай бұрын
"if buying isn't owning, piracy isn't stealing."
@chonky_walrus9 ай бұрын
Fuck modern marketing, I only buy indie things now. I pirate games, youtube premium, spotify, movies, tv shows... And I get a better experience than my paying friends.
@UndeadFleshgod9 ай бұрын
The part that made me go "oh, hmmm.." is not the phosphorus scene, it's a part near the end where I went through a window and immediately shot a guy before he had the time to get his weapon. Then the narrator in the earpiece said something like "Why would you do that? He was not armed" and the character answers like "how do you know that" or something like that, and it was at that point that I realized the narrator was actually speaking to me, the player, and not the in-game character.
@RustCohle0729 ай бұрын
It's because Conrad had been dead the entire game and Walker was hallucinating hearing and seeing him.
@UndeadFleshgod9 ай бұрын
@@RustCohle072 Wasn't it something like fade to black was real and fade to white transitions were hallucinations? Been a while
@letsget100subswithoutconte48 ай бұрын
thats a horrible line tho. when everyone you’ve encountered has been hostile that person is probably also hostile
@goldonawheelchair65826 ай бұрын
@@UndeadFleshgod I think you mean the zipline part when the hallucination happens
@ProcyonNite29 күн бұрын
@@letsget100subswithoutconte4Not a good way of thinking.
@Astra_the_dragon_uwu9 ай бұрын
THIS IS WHY ARCHIVES AND LIBRARIES ARE IMPORTANT! always save a backup, somewhere, somehow. information and knowledge is priceless and precious.
@alessandrolamera88579 ай бұрын
Wait I have it on steam what will it happen?
@iChannelz889 ай бұрын
@@alessandrolamera8857If you already own it, you can play it like normal
@thewiseowl88049 ай бұрын
@@alessandrolamera8857You already bought it, so it will remain in your library.
@rooislangwtf9 ай бұрын
@@alessandrolamera8857 you can still install it
@JanTuts9 ай бұрын
@@ItaIakinhoJust because you still have it in your Steam library dies not guarantee it will still work as expected. Take for example GTA: San Andreas, I still "have it" on Steam, but I can apparently only install a half broken Spanish version ever since Rockstar nuked it.
@hongquiao9 ай бұрын
From what I understand, it's being removed because the licensing for certain songs used in the game is coming to an end. Here's what I don't get, when you pay the licensing fee to have a song in your movie, the song is part of the movie forever. Why isn't this also the case for video games?
@cherubin7th9 ай бұрын
Depends of the agreement. They knowingly agreed to a limited time license for some reason. This could happen with a movie too there is no legal difference. Movie people just don't make that mistake.
@ZebulonsPi9 ай бұрын
It's a matter of money. You can choose to lease a property for X years at a MUCH lower cost than buying said property outright. When game companies talk about licensing coming to an end, what they're telling us is that the terms they "leased" the assets for are coming to an end. Given the rise of MBAs in video game development, this type of thing is a ticking time bomb in a lot of AAA gaming, and we have ZERO idea when these bombs might go off.
@lelandwhitehead569 ай бұрын
Always comes down to profit. If they can pay even slightly less to license for 5 or 10 years than a lifetime license, they will, even if it doesn’t make sense for the media
@ZKtheMAN9 ай бұрын
There's another aspect to this discussion that I'm not seeing raised. When you use a licensed song in a film, it's embedded into the sound data of the video and can't be easily extracted without also carrying dialogue and sound effects from the movie. When you use a licensed song in a _game,_ you have to ship the _exact data_ of the song with your game, without any other sounds in it, so that the game program can play it at runtime and layer all other sounds on top. That means players who are intelligent enough can figure out how to extract the song, then pass the method on to other players who can get ahold of it easier. I'm sure music rights holders are aware of this and aren't quite fond of it.
@ZKtheMAN9 ай бұрын
@Ajapam34 Word, and I don't think the rights holders like that either. But they can still hold developers and publishers to account because of the raw facts of developing and distributing a video game. "If you genuinely expect us to allow you to distribute an _exact copy_ of the work we hold the rights to inside your silly little video game, you're going to have to agree to some limits." And game publishers can get away with a lot, but not quite so easily with businesses like the RIAA.
@Tormentadeplomo9 ай бұрын
At the end of the 80s and during the 90s many game dev companies and publishers closed and the game rights they made and sold got lost in a legal void and disappeared. Moreover most players didn't care about old games back then, the retro-gaming wasn't a thing yet as all the players were young and they wanted the latest thing. Despite that, there was always a community who cared and preserved those games. They did things as incredible as creating emulators to replicate an old computer into a PC, and dumping old code from arcade boards, cartridges or cassette tapes into PC files. And they did a great job keeping the past alive. My point is, games won't be preserved by big companies, they will be preserved by players. And I know Spec Ops: The Line will be there, somewhere in the internet, in some abandonware website. It won't be lost.
@GregorianMG9 ай бұрын
Piracy despite its nature can also work as an attempt to preserve the game.
@revoblam79759 ай бұрын
It goes to show, we aren't losing another one to the corpos.
@scratchguns9 ай бұрын
@GregorianMG it's only piracy if they are making money off it. They de-listed the game so it's no longer making money. What's being stolen at that point?
@Crispman_7779 ай бұрын
@@scratchguns It's still stealing if somebody else owns it, it's just more morally justified.
@LuizAlexPhoenix9 ай бұрын
My thesis is on the archival and preservation of games and their cultural impact. The super boiled down conclusion is that fans are the biggest factor in preserving games. Ideally, there should be movements so that games are sent to national archives and libraries, much like books and movies. Also, copyright law should be adjusted to allow distribution and emulation of abandoned games whose legal purchase ceased to be possible. Finally, I am studying a possible standard file for preservation, such as a PDF-A, so that games can be stored in an efficient and integral way. My first subject was Vimm's Lair and they are a great place to visit.
@pavarottiaardvark34319 ай бұрын
Honestly, I don't think the fun gunplay hurts Spec Ops as a piece of art. If you talk to veterans, many of them say that actual combat can be a real rush *at the time*
@DiabolicCrusher9 ай бұрын
Well, adrenaline can be addictive after all.
@calonordstoast9 ай бұрын
Can confirm fighting for your life is the most fun you'll ever have - if you make it out alive.
@calastyphon34149 ай бұрын
Yeah and I think violence of the 'subjective violence' violence which Zizek talks about can be stylised in a way which accelerates the adrenaline to add a new level of horror to it. Combat being a thrill in an anti war game shows its ability to subvert the human psyche into becoming a thrilling participant. I think there's a lot there to explore with that. I'm particularly reminded of how punk and industrial bands like Killing Joke made audiences uncomfortable with the violence of the imagery or how J.G. Ballard pushes violence to the extreme to show the thin veneer we place in front of it. If anything the thrill of those serves them well as a piece of art and I'd apply that logic to Spec Ops
@NickJerrison9 ай бұрын
Same goes for Metal Gear Solid, especially 4. A lot of the times you'll see some people debate whether the franchise and MGS4 in particular is anti-war or glorifying war, and oftentimes they'll mention how going lethal is often the easier and more fun way to play than non-lethal, but to me it feels more like by glorifying war to an almost fetishistic extent it only achieves its anti-war message more successfully. It also addresses one of the criticisms Spec Ops: The Line got that was mentioned in this video: yes, going lethal can be easier and more fun, but in MGS it is ultimately your choice, and sometimes the game will even directly call you out on it later (MGS3).
@mechanicalmonk20209 ай бұрын
The game was fun?
@onlysmiles49499 ай бұрын
One of the most interesting things I've learned about Call of Duty as a franchise is that there's a scene in one of the games that has you walking through a destroyed highway strip that was bombarded by Russian troops, which was called the "Highway of Death" in-game, and this on its own doesn't seem too bad... ...only the "Highway of Death" was a real historical event where a highway strip was bombed in the Gulf War, and it was an event carried out by American troops
@mandu66659 ай бұрын
Call of Duty is jingoistic propaganda at best and a shitty recruiting tool for America's terrorist military cabals at worst.
@Creepernom9 ай бұрын
Though the highway of death irl is a bit of a more complex matter than directly bad or good.
@onlysmiles49499 ай бұрын
@@Creepernom Sure but it's still hard not to see it as revisionist history
@Creepernom9 ай бұрын
@@onlysmiles4949 I haven't played CoD, but I'm guessing that the context is quite different from the real highway of death, with the only similarity being a bombed highway with a very obvious name. Using that kind of name doesn't feel like revisionism because it's an incredibly obvious and logical choice, considering how stuff like that usually gets named. You have a big blown up road with (probably) lots of broken equipment and dead folk, what name fits this kind of landscape better?
@arsenii_yavorskyi9 ай бұрын
this was an acceptable application of a creative license. why? because for Americans, this is an atrocity. for Russians, it's Tuesday.
@George_vv9 ай бұрын
I really hope this becomes like Allen Wake where a few years ago it was delisted for "licenses" but got added back due to popular demand.
@shadyrabbit0079 ай бұрын
"Do you feel like a hero yet?"
@geofff.33439 ай бұрын
All you have to do is not play...
@Wtdtd9 ай бұрын
@@geofff.3343 That is not really a valid answer with games, because of the fact that you bought it. More often than not you can't get a refund, so you better get your money's worth out of it, no matter how shit it is. It's like buying a music cd, but not being allowed to listen to the last 3 songs on it.
@GGreenHeart9 ай бұрын
Such a good line.
@colt19039 ай бұрын
@@geofff.3343 Which is ironic, because the message of the game doesn't hit nearly as hard if you don't play it to the end.
@benwasserman82239 ай бұрын
@@colt1903 Yeah but there's literally a "Stop! turn back!" sign in the opening level. So they're warning you pretty early on.
@LavenderGooms9 ай бұрын
When I played it, I was one of the people for whom the White Phosphorous section fell flat. I saw in the overhead camera a large group of people, not moving, all bunched together, while a huge battle is going on a few feet away from them. I thought "those are civilians" and didn't fire the last shots but it wouldn't let me progress until I did. But yes that's also the point too. Yeah it works as a surprising reveal if you don't see it coming, but if you do see it coming the fact you can't do anything about it is just another bad thing you have to do because war leads to nothing but horrible outcomes. You're not making these decisions- the general, the politicians, the leaders who sent soldiers into a place equipped with White Phosphorous made that decision. It's not a secret hidden stockpile that is found and hauled out in a dire moment, it's actively set up on the battlefield with a mortar and targeting system ready to go. And prior to that point I had been happily using it against human beings already. Those soldiers were also people, and no one deserves having White Phosphorous happen to them. So I saw it coming and balked at it being forced, but that's real life. When it gets to the point that a country is sending soldiers into a place like that with those weapons, the outcome is easy to see coming. Seeing it coming and doing it anyway is the decision this country makes. Because war crimes aren't accidental, they are deliberate. That weapon is there to be used.
@thpion9 ай бұрын
You have the choice to shut the game down and not continuing to play. And I think that's the point the game is trying to make. Nobody forces you to buy and play CoD, but people do it regardless.
@xKumei9 ай бұрын
The "just following orders" defense has never been justifiable.
@patrickmartin22369 ай бұрын
That weapon is meant to be used **like it's supposed to**, that is, with proper target identification. The fact the game railroads you into fucking up makes it way fundamentally less morally impactful than an average JTAC fucky wucky in an Arma op that isn't even meant to bear moral meaning. As for "you could have stopped playing anytime", that's basically chastising the audience for actually investing themselves in the story you've written, which is dumb. Undertale's approach to "you should have quit fucking around while you could" is dramatically better, since the bad ending requires an extremely dedicated investment, with plenty of opportunity to give up, and most importantly, **the right decision being self-contained within the game**.
@thedigitaldummy30989 ай бұрын
@@xKumeiI never got why that’s the case. If it’s between me getting punished for disobeying orders and some random civvies I’ve never heard of before, I’m committing as many war crimes as it takes to keep myself alive. Do people have an obligation to throw their own lives away when their commanders are the ones at fault?
@ChucksSEADnDEAD9 ай бұрын
That's why the Homefront WP scene is better.
@grankmisguided9 ай бұрын
Those loading screen tips that start saying shit like "Do you feel like a hero yet?" and "You are still a good person." is what I remember most vividly from playing this game, and I would argue is one of its most effective subversions of tropes. Because those tips are always about gameplay mechanics, either meta conceits that are part of the loop or control details, things that are really zoomed in and very detached from characterization or motivation, so skipping loaded moral challenge messages directly to the player that way is quite explosive.
@NeutralDrow5 ай бұрын
Those are what I remember most about the game, too, but for exactly the opposite reason. It was like getting trolled on a message board you had to read but couldn't post on, by someone who thought they were way more clever than they were.
@grankmisguided5 ай бұрын
@@NeutralDrow fair 🤣
@TheQuattro009 ай бұрын
The problem with The Line is that its main selling point cant be sold
@shytendeakatamanoir97409 ай бұрын
I realized that during the opening segment. If you know the game, you know the twist. That's why it's remembered
@arsenii_yavorskyi9 ай бұрын
brilliant
@mikhaelgribkov41179 ай бұрын
I think people miss out on themes of self justification and how some collectible tell a narative of decay.
@FrozenOver09 ай бұрын
Yeah. It was never going to stand out enough from the crowd to reach its target audience. The majority of people who bought it ended up being the ones spoiled on it to one degree or another, and already agreed with its message.
@LineOfThy9 ай бұрын
Product vs Art >:(
@Speculaas9 ай бұрын
I know it sounds anti-consumer and very dumb in other contexts but I wish there were more Trojan Horse games like Spec Ops: the Line. Games where you go in, expecting to get the experience you want, only to leave overwhelmed, experienced something you didn't think you needed. AAA games with impact like this are very rare and it's a huge loss to the artform that they're disappearing for new audiences.
@CyanRooper9 ай бұрын
Spec Ops: The Line 🤝 Doki Doki Literature Club Advertise themselves as something fun and seemingly normal games only to turn into the most disturbing and horrifying experiences when you least expect it.
@augustdeer9 ай бұрын
This is a lot more common in indie games, since they have lower budgets and can afford to piss off some of their intended audience. Even so, I don’t know of any other games that are direct criticisms of their facade genres, usually just an interesting twist on them.
@kintozero31699 ай бұрын
"Games where you go in, expecting to get the experience you want, only to leave overwhelmed, experienced something you didn't think you needed." This sounds like Metal Gear Solid 2. And Braid.
@----2489 ай бұрын
I mean, that's kind of what Last of us part 2 tried in a way. But the early leaks ruined the "surprise".
@PinkSupervisor9 ай бұрын
It is absolutely needed. Because a lot of the time, the customers don't know what they want. So you gotta make that decision for them.
@randobandobby64439 ай бұрын
There was a great video essay about Spec Ops: The Line that really opened my eyes when it came to video game violence. Went something like this, Spec Ops: The Line was never about punishing the player for there deeds in the game but rather asking questions on how they viewed it, the big one was "do you feel like a hero yet?". Now before I continue look at games like Dishonored, Cyberpunk 2077, Splinter Cell Blacklist and many others that give you the options of Lethal vs non-Lethal, now how many games don't give you that non-Lethal option? How many games gives you that opportunity to split you opponents in half with a chainsaw? How many games give you visceral gory feedback? As I said before the game SOTL isn't trying to punish you and say "Look he/she is a psychopath." But it's questioning you on how easy it is to pull that trigger against a pixel, was it easy using the throwing knives or the machete? Did you choose to slit you opponents throat or blow their limbs off them? Was it badass or gross when you snap someone neck and hear a meaty crunch? Was the reaction you elicit a bit of disgust and awe? Developers can and should always have Violence as one of there tools for game making. BUT the true measure of us (the consumer) is whether or not we acknowledge that line/violence. Example from personal experience: I remember being as brutal as a warmonger in Cyberpunk, I tore, shredded and killed anything that either I didn't agree with or cause I wanted too. Then for some reason I decided to be as pacifist, knocked people out, tazed others, avoided and used other avenues to complete a gang hideout without killing everyone, then after a week in I remember pulling out a revolver and splattering a punk's brain matter all over the wall, and to see that gore after so long of keeping people together, I wasn't mortified, or crying, just an audible "Damn." came out of my mouth. Spec Ops: The Line is asking as well as questioning, how far are you willing to go for an objective, and is it easy to reach into your heart of darkness to kill people if you know they aren't people/real people, where do you draw The Line. My Favorite Quote from this game (I might butcher it, so sorry) was, "We drew the line, that was our starting point."
@TheNobodyNamedDubyaBee9 ай бұрын
It's also really about the highly rigid, dichotomous distinction we the player set when it comes to facing/handling violence in the real world and violence in the video game world... _that we all use in order to justify and take for granted the latter._ It's as if we enforce an apartheid upon game characters in the sense that because they are merely digital, soulless, fictional constructs and nothing more, they are subhuman outcasts, that we shouldn't take things too seriously about them, that it's unnecessary for us to assign sympathetic sentiments to them unlike with real-life entities, and therefore we can do whatever we want with them (be it violence or sexualization), with a peace of mind via those "reassurances." Essentially, video games like this drive home the point of how human empathy must be universal and unconditional, one that applies beyond all the beings we encounter in the physical real world.
@FlameJackstar9 ай бұрын
It's one of the best "Heart of Darkness" stories ever made in videogame form.
@ImposterSloth9 ай бұрын
It's the only true game adaptation IMO. Different games have taken influence for sure, but Spec Ops is actually a careful retelling.
@BWSSoldya9 ай бұрын
As far as I'm concerned it's not only the best "heart of darkness" stories in videogames, it's one of the, if not the, best narrative in games, period. I have not seen any other game that does narrative quite like Spec Ops has done. The slow and gradual decline into madness, the slow and gradual backstab of the actual player of the game (in terms of expectations vs reality), the constant fourth wall breaking, the various shock moments, all of it is an absolute master class in narrative story telling in video games. If I had to pick one single game that I could entirely forget and then replay, it'd be this one. It's severely underrated and it deserves so much more attention and so many more people playing the game.
@peacfl96109 ай бұрын
Either this or far cry 3
@thecanmanification9 ай бұрын
I think you’re missing a comma there. The way you have it now it can imply that it’s not a good adaptation actually 😅
@L1vv4n9 ай бұрын
@@peacfl9610 FC3 has nothing on the spec ops: the line. Even FC2 if extremely under-cooked much closer both in tone and narrative questions.
@jbradleymusic9 ай бұрын
See also the entirety of the Drakengard/Nier series. For 20 years, Yoko Taro has been trying to draw attention to the fact that a lot of video games as we know them today are geared towards embracing the psychopathy of being a serial killer.
@bobvella72289 ай бұрын
Only played automata Spoiler I actually enjoyed how every side quest has a bad ending, did I miss a message?
@TheNobodyNamedDubyaBee9 ай бұрын
The credits sequence of Nier: Automata's Ending E was certainly a meta-level milestone in the series' cornerstone themes on killing in video games. Seven years on, perhaps people need to realize and reflect upon *more than ever before* that its premise of scapegoating and dehumanizing the game's real-world creators and do the equivalent of raining down white phosphorus rounds upon them to get the outcome the players wanted so badly was already an overt telltale sign that the ending in question was anything but feel-good or humanist.
@arthurp3ndrag0n9 ай бұрын
The first Nier made me feel so bad for killing like no game ever did before or after, it was brilliant.
@red__guy9 ай бұрын
Automata made keep one alive the worst choice Pascal
@Shadow666_9 ай бұрын
@@TheNobodyNamedDubyaBeeEnding E was incredibly corny. Honestly im really dissapointed how yoko taros games have a reputation for having dark endings but if you just replay the game a thousand times and collect a bunch of weapons then *you too! can have a disney princess happy ending* Where as The original/first endings to replicant and automata are actually in line with the tone and story of the game.
@AegixDrakan9 ай бұрын
Spec Ops holds a special place in my heart because I actually learned and internalized something from it. "Your good intentions mean nothing, when your actions are monstrous" So to see this monumental game vanish because of some licensing BS... It REALLY sucks. :(
@darkfenerata10149 ай бұрын
Here in Italy during the 5th year of highschool we have to create a "Tesina", a term paper of variable length about a random subject. I picked "Are videogames a form of art?" and Spec Ops:The Line was my starting point. (I'm glad I did, I would've failed that year if it wasn't for that damn term paper that bumped up my score to a passing grade) I used it to connect various school subjects like the obvious inspiration it took from Heart of Darkness and consequentially Apocalypse Now, managed to connect it to the "4th wall breaking" writers of the early 1900's in Italy like Pirandello and then science, history ect ect. I hold very very close to my heart this incredible title that is often talked about but rarely seen. It created a great atmosphere, didn't outstay its welcome and told a memorable story. It's a damn shame that all of that for most of the public will become much harder to experience. It is one of "Those games", those games that once you've finished you feel weird. Not accomplished, not happy nor sad. Empty? Sad? Nothing at all? Very few games can make someone feel like that, this was definitely one of them. I can only hope that some sort of compromise or other action will allow the game to stay on Steam and other major platforms for I can only wish for people to experience what a ride this game was
@FrensisR9 ай бұрын
Gran bel argomento di tesina, complimenti! Non mi dispiacerebbe darle una lettura :)
@glibchubik40909 ай бұрын
You still have that paper on you bro? I'd read it with curiosity, even if not in English I'll manage
@admiraladama58779 ай бұрын
A sense of Enui perhaps?
@xFedo9 ай бұрын
Fossi stato parte della commissione ti avrei promosso subito 😂 ottima scelta!
@lofimonkeyjazz9 ай бұрын
sempre bello vedere argomenti originali agli esami, complimentoni per la scelta, mi porterò sempre nel cuore sto gioco
@dr.badguyreviews67859 ай бұрын
I was able to snag it off GOG just before the take down. The fact that it went down without warning is just despicable. I'd say 2K should be ashamed, but we know that's not possible.
@haoyu539 ай бұрын
I don't understand why they didn't make an announcement beforehand? It would also make business sense to get that one last boost of sale
@yutro2139 ай бұрын
I was lucky to buy Spec Ops The Line on a deal at GOG just the day before it was removed from digital stores, since I had feared this would happen very soon, and I was right. I have had it on Steam for several years and finished it, but I wanted to officially get a no-DRM copy!
@XenoSpyro9 ай бұрын
Same. Snatched that shit up the minute I heard about it. Not only did GOG still carry it, but it was on sale. Double win.
@newginslab69939 ай бұрын
I’m glad I still have the physical version for consoles. But yeah this is why DRM free versions in PC and physical disc versions for consoles are important. Where already seeing games only like a decade old being pulled away from stores and libraries and it’s only going to get worse. I don’t want my library to turn to dust so ways to preserve purchases will always be important to me, and hopefully others too
@Mysticbladegod9 ай бұрын
Same here
@farmboyjad9 ай бұрын
One fact that I remember that showed how committed to the premise they were: the fatigue you hear in the main cast's voices over the course of the game is real. They recorded all of their parts in order, in a single day-long marathon recording session. As a result, you can hear their voices progressively break down over the course of the game until they're all totally blown out and can barely talk anymore. It's brutal to hear, but it really drives home how broken the characters themselves have become by the conclusion.
@thecoolestofthe834s29 ай бұрын
wow video game crunch is so cool.......
@abhirammanthena73339 ай бұрын
@@thecoolestofthe834s2I think it's made that way on purpose, with the approval of the VAs...
@spazemfathemcazemmeleggymi2729 ай бұрын
@@thecoolestofthe834s2being a lazy bastard and complaining about your boss forcing you to do your job is not cool.
@ntfoperative94328 ай бұрын
@@thecoolestofthe834s2it wasn’t crunch, the VAs purposely did it that way
@sodiumhydrocarbonate47078 ай бұрын
@@spazemfathemcazemmeleggymi272 Eah, mate. That's totally what they complain about. And not about 80 hours work weeks and a general sorry state of the industry and a treatment of workers in said industry. Nice bait btw, I took it
@calvinfishermedia9 ай бұрын
Dang, I'm a pretty tiny youtuber, so it was a surreal moment to see my video pop up in the scroll near the end! Spec Ops the Line is one of my favorite games of all time, so I'm glad it's being talked about more again, even though it's for ultimately a sad reason.
@bardiaoudi668 ай бұрын
One thing i loved about SOTL was how it showed Walker slowly going insane without using scripted cutscenes that shoved the insanity down your throat At the start of the game, all members are tactical Lugo pointing out the enemies' locations practically and Adams informing you about his situation calmly On the other half of the game, specially after the white phosphorus scene, Lugo is screaming the enemy whenever something is going on, and Adams is always scared and angry But the best goes for Walker himself At first when he executes his targets, the executions are clean and fast, and he just says "Target Down" But after the phosphorus scene, his executions are much more bloody, like purposely shooting the target in the knees and then shooting them in the head. He also either screams, or tries to justify his actions by saying it was the Enemy's fault
@blob-like_Frog9 ай бұрын
This War of Mine makes you suffer the horrors of war. Spec Ops: the Line makes you commit the horrors of war
@erikheijden98289 ай бұрын
Both wrong, you cannot compare a game to real life. You can kill 1 million babies in a game, it means nothing. Lose 1 person in real life and it's a huge life event.
@nunyabiznes74469 ай бұрын
This War of Mine made me suffer the horrors of trying to use stairs without the pathing glitching out
@redundantfridge97649 ай бұрын
Let's not forget about being so unhealthily good at "This War Of Mine" that you could turn Anton into the traumatic event and make all violent actions into nostalgia.
@matthewjones67869 ай бұрын
@@nunyabiznes7446 So by extension, Spec Ops: the Line makes you commit stairs.
@Coffeepanda2949 ай бұрын
Well said.
@i8dacookies8909 ай бұрын
The dialog right before the prompt that leads to the white phosphorus scene is so brilliant. It's obvious that it's asking the big question of whether simply turning off the game is a valid choice.
@ace-smith9 ай бұрын
it's so cool! and regardless of the technique, all we get is discussions about whether it should have asked the question at all. of course it should have - it's an essential part of the game! but people will go "but it cost money" and it's like ok then go ahead and finish the game then, you aren't really hurting real people! if spec ops the line's messaging made you literally unable to complete it, then you got your money's worth. it's clear all this is an intentional part of the (very good) narrative
@RyanReenBattikh9 ай бұрын
This game and Metal Gear introduced me to the idea of chemical warfare involving civilian casualties and the horror of ethnic cleansing - especially today when white phosphorus is still used on civilians indiscriminately. Games can be powerful tools of ideological influence and understanding humanity and it's devastating to see this game go away when it is EXTREMELY topical in the current age.
@trustytrest9 ай бұрын
Tbh, even if you turn off the game, it doesn't mean anything. The story only plays out one way by that point. You're just removing your ability to observe it, like an ostrich burying its head in the sand.
@Arkouchie9 ай бұрын
I honestly think undertale pulled this off way better - When you complete the game's true pacifist ending, you get told that you've given everyone in the game the best possible ending, and there's only one thing that can take that away - You. If you continue to play, continue to to prod at all the content you can find, you'll eventually find the way to ruin that happy ending. The game literally begs you to stop playing, to give up and not see what's left to find. If you continue playing and try to find the game's last path, the No Mercy path, you're ignoring the game telling you not to. You've already had at least two full playthroughs, you've gotten your money's worth. Can't you stop, and let them have their happy ending? And of course, as gamers, the answer is invariably "no."
@LeMicronaut9 ай бұрын
@@Arkouchie Me trying to 100% the dictionary at any cost. Gamer moment inbound.
@L4NC3_L0T9 ай бұрын
I wish they would just patch out those 2 bits of music they no longer have the license for... better to have silence then no game at all. Also: there's another reason a lot of media portrait the us military as "heroes"/the good guys": the US military! Since shortly after WWII they ended up having a last say whenever a movie etc. got made and could practically direct/censor what american companies produced. The creators usually got "help" from the military in form of borrowing material/knowlege from them. But if your movie did not look the way they wanted it wouldn't be able to be made.
@colonel10035 ай бұрын
Michael Bay using a real JDAM being dropped by a F-22
@Ahrpigi9 ай бұрын
I had a similar argument with an old acquaintance over the original Dishonored. They were so *mad* that the game had all these cool powers and different ways to kill enemies, but then "punished" you for using them. He just could not see that power and it's abuse was a major theme of the game.
@11cat1239 ай бұрын
On one hand that is a theme of the story, on the other non-lethal takedowns weren't even a thing early in development, it was something they implemented much later on. Dishonored 2 had non-lethal in mind from the start and you could tell.
@SjorsHoukes9 ай бұрын
“With great power…”
@theresnothinghere17459 ай бұрын
Dishonored I consider a very different story. In dishonored it isn't 'evil actions' or even the use of the powers that gets you high chaos. Its disrupting the society, leaving corpses for the disease to spread, killing civilians ontop of guards, etc... Your punishment is a realistic consequence of actively making the city worse and its only a 'punishment' in so far as the story is concerned which playes who went out of their way to be a killer rather than an assasin, as per the story, really should care less about. Spec ops by contrast has no options for the player, the game holds them at fault for playing the game regardless of their actions within the game. Even if you think the white phosporus is a bad idea there is no way to circumvent doing it and then the game directly asking the player "Do you feel like a hero?". If it was just about Walker it be fine as a character study but pivoting over the 4th wall then pose the same questions to the player directly feels unearned.
@rowtow139 ай бұрын
My takeaway from that game was that using power and stealth killing everyone and ruining society is way more fun than tiptoeing around everyone and you should just do it and look up the good ending on KZbin.
@TheWolverine79 ай бұрын
@@11cat123 it may not have been a thing early in development, but it's absolutely a thing in the actual game and was very intentionally integrated into the game's design. I mean I even did a playthrough and got achievements for completing the game without unlocking any powers (Mostly Flesh and Steel), alerting anyone (Ghost), or killing anyone (Clean Hands).
@LukeCypert9 ай бұрын
I've been waiting for years for you to get to this game! I can't wait to see what you have to say. Let me share my story with the game: I was at a boring part of my life, not much to do, so I went looking for a fun game to torrent (don't pirate kids). I saw The Line trending, so I downloaded and started it. I loved the graphics, and the characters were more talkative than I'd experienced in other shooters, so I was having fun. Then it all started to go to hell... I pushed through and finished the game, hoping it would get better. I didn't know what to feel. I'd been gaming for 20 years but hadn't experienced anything like that. So I went to cleanse my pallet by playing Star Wars Jedi Academy, for some fun action... But I couldn't! I was at a point in the game where I was supposed to drop down and ambush some stormtroopers, but they were just chilling and talking about speeders they liked... I did kill them. But then I felt sick. So I stopped playing. And didn't play any single player killing games for years. I read a book about the game too, Killing is Harmless. It was helpful to understand what The Line did to me. It notes that the only way to "win" the game, is to stop playing. Anyway, the Line changed how I think about games forever.
@jackthefoxy37889 ай бұрын
*”Do you feel like a hero yet?”* That very line shall haunted me forever to reminded me war is brutal to the point that stripped away humanity inside.
@VidGamer1239 ай бұрын
*"The US military does not condone the killing of unarmed combatants. But this isn't real, so why should you care?"*
@codemonster84439 ай бұрын
WELP! Gotta boot up my PC to continue seeding again, the ratio is gonna be crazy lol
@cakes18319 ай бұрын
Hero
@S4B3R1179 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service o7
@illuminoeye_gaming9 ай бұрын
goat behavior thank you for your service
@AJayZy7 ай бұрын
Amazing brother
@III_three7 ай бұрын
Godspeed
@lavarsch9 ай бұрын
NO MATTER what media. everything should be available to the public. Movies, Pictures, Games, Music... There's so much lost media that i part of our history and a snapshot of the time.
@czaczaczar9 ай бұрын
Abandonwares should become public domain.
@Skeletons_Riding_Ostriches9 ай бұрын
Yes. Or at least after people stop selling it (at a reasonable price). We need some sort of digital art preservation laws and we need stuff to be more consumer-friendly.
@GregorianMG9 ай бұрын
Welp, time to pirate the game...
@lavarsch9 ай бұрын
@@Skeletons_Riding_Ostriches WEll, all the big Companies HOARDING IP's and never doing anything with them is a big problem
@xyg498 ай бұрын
I played this game while home from work, having just had major dental surgery. I was sweaty, dizzy from all the painkillers I was taking that only slightly numbed the constant pain, and had to think about holding the bloody gauze in my mouth. I played the game for about 10 hours then collapsed, had a restless sleep of no more than 4 hours, and woke up and finished it. I felt about as sane as the player character when I chose to believe I could go home at the end. An unforgettable and harrowing experience.
@wolframvonstein73038 ай бұрын
If this story really played out the way you described it, it sounds like a damn bad trip alright... did you manage to recover, at least partially?
@onescenewonder89049 ай бұрын
This game had such a huge impact, not only on the industry, but on me individually. It was the first video game I played that criticized my actions in the game, like GMTK said, it was kinda groundbreaking in war game story telling. I was in college at the time, and spec ops helped me understand that games can be art, even if they aren't a stereotypical "art" game. It's hard to put into words how upsetting it is that it's just gone from stores.
@bromachrome9 ай бұрын
I am so happy I picked up this game before this happened. I bought it on a whim years ago, not thinking much of it, but when I finally played it it changed my life. I knew then, that I wanted to be a game developer.
@palebluenarratives9 ай бұрын
I really appreciate your courage in tackling such a sensitive topic, and the usual politeness and expertise with which you did it. Honored to be a patron of yours. Thank you, Mark.
@chillydonuts9 ай бұрын
I think I'm gonna yell (or cry). I had the game in my Steam wishlist and I really, really wanted to play it. I wish I bought it sooner and seeing this notification made my heart drop.
@liammcnicholas9189 ай бұрын
I have San Andreas on my Steam wishlist and it’s never going to be relisted
@chillydonuts9 ай бұрын
@@liammcnicholas918 Gosh darn! I've had the game in mind but never got around to searching for a way to play it. Was it taken down in favor of the definitive edition?
@chillydonuts9 ай бұрын
@MambaMfupi I think I'm going to try getting my hands on a physical copy. :D
@RussellWaldrop9 ай бұрын
Pirate that shit.
@jasonsorin10219 ай бұрын
@@chillydonuts someone has to have it "archived" somewhere. if they refuse to sell it you can just go get it for free.
@Vallam239 ай бұрын
I think a lot of people miss that the game isn't about war, but war video games. it's not "what if we took a military shooter and then showed the actual ramifications of being in a war", it's "what if we took a military shooter and then showed the actual ramifications of being *the protagonist in a military shooter video game"* like so many games have you play as some group of good guys, then go through a gameplay section where you murder 30 people, then in the next cutscene you're the same good guys, then you go through a gameplay section where you murder a hundred people, and you go on like that without ever acknowledging your body count and it never effects your character or their crew. but in spec ops, you go through a gameplay section where you kill 30 people and then in the next cutscene your teammates are like "oh my god did we just kill like 30 people" and then you go through a gameplay section where you kill 100 people and they're like "holy shit that was so many people how is this even real" and it goes on like that until your crew fractures and you completely detach from reality. people complained that the shooting was repetitive but i think that was part of the point, to drive home that you were killing an unrealistic number of people. by the end of the game, you have killed nearly EVERY PERSON in the city on BOTH sides. it's not a realistic commentary on war, but it IS a realistic sendup of war video games. people say the white phosphorus section is forced, but how many video games require you to end an unimaginable number of simulated human lives as a necessary part of your interaction with the work? the game makes you recognize that the gameplay violence is happening in the same narrative as the rest of the game, and looks at how the world would actually react to the average mass murdering video game protagonist. I've always said that spec ops isn't about how video game violence desensitizes us to real life violence, but about how video game violence desensitizes us to **video game violence**
@ChucksSEADnDEAD9 ай бұрын
People complained that the shooting was repetitive because the gunplay was bad. That's why it felt like a bore. It committed almost every sin in generic 3rd person shooters. People saying it's bad on purpose is retroactive cope. Were all generic third person shooters making a point? Or it was just a game design quirk from that console gen?
@RyanReenBattikh9 ай бұрын
Also I literally did not know that WP was used on civilians before this game - as troubling as that is to include in entertainment, I think it's something that for me was a huge catalyst for looking at both America and war much differently. And is still something that happens, as recently as 4 months ago, it's enraging to see such an enduringly relevant piece of media get lost like this.
@noobguy99739 ай бұрын
@@ChucksSEADnDEAD I actually found the gunplay pretty nice and fun. My only grip was that vaulting was on same button as execution which felt weird ohh and ı played on KM.
@Wveth9 ай бұрын
@@noobguy9973 I'm pretty sure the guy you're responding to isn't actually here to have a discussion. Look at how aggressive, insecure and arrogant he's acting. The whole point is to bait you into responding so that he can find more ways to insult you. Maybe I'm wrong and he just had a really bad day or something, but in my experience people don't act like that if they're actually willing to converse like a well-adjusted person.
@noobguy99739 ай бұрын
@@Wveth XD at least ı voiced out my opinion about the game and a person or two read it and seems to agree with me looking at likes.
@remuvs9 ай бұрын
Spec Ops: The Line reminds me of one scene in the movie "Brothers" featuring Tobey Maguire as Sam and Jake Gyllenhaal as Tommy. Sam was captured as a PoW and forced to bludgeon a fellow American soldier to death with a pipe while being recorded for terrorist propaganda. When Sam is free and returns home he has a meltdown due to the psychological effects of war, he's confronted by police who try console him, calling him a war hero. He responds with "I'm no fucking hero, I'm no fucking hero! Do you _know_ what I've done?". That line has always stuck with me and kind of mirrors the one in Spec Ops; Do you feel like a hero yet? Media like Spec Ops and Brothers highlight how military action is romanticized. Being showcased as admirable, heroic and veterans suffering the psychological fallout of combat are told generic phrases like "thank you for your service" by people who are none the wiser to what they've been through. For characters like Walker and Sam, they're anything but people worthy of admiration.
@thedragonlord49528 ай бұрын
I don't agree with the notion you're nearly making that soldiers are terrible people (again, you ALMOST suggested this). If there is one thing I suggest telling soldiers instead of "thank you for your service", it would be "thank you for doing what you had to do, and what I could never do".
@seg1628 ай бұрын
I was of the impression that "thank you for your service" was a counterreaction to the fact that Americans were actively abusing Vietnam War vets, despite the fact that many of them were conscripted and then were ordered to do and otherwise survive terrible things that even they regret.
@4.0.49 ай бұрын
I do not fear as much for old games, but I do fear for any potentially good game somehow coming out of modern AAA studios (hey, anything is possible!) since they are slowly moving to online-only, un-"backup"-able entries.
@Skeletons_Riding_Ostriches9 ай бұрын
We'll all have to learn how to write server emulators.
@GenericSoda9 ай бұрын
Very cool seeing you link Professor Bopper's stuff, he's got be of my favorite voices in video game analysis/essays and has lots of thoughtful vides on game design, narrative, mechanics, and gameplay.
@RelyksLegacy9 ай бұрын
This game broke me at the White Phosphorous scene and yet I couldn't.. not finish the story. A decade later and I still think about it every now and then. I'm still an avid "shooter gamer" but I look at campaigns differently now.
@abbcc59964 ай бұрын
i stopped playing when the wrong choice i made ended with one of my squad mates dying, or getting lynched. i cant remember as it has been years. i didn't stop because i didn't like the game mind you i was just frustrated at making the wrong choice
@JackRogers-x9e4 ай бұрын
Who gives a fuck lol. Sometimes civies die. It’s been like that since the Romans. Maybe if they properly marked themselves as non-combatants they wouldn’t have to take a bath in Willie Pete.
@MrLewislauyik9 ай бұрын
Didn't expect Mark to talk about things other than gameplay design and game story. Definitely should talk more about the moral side of gaming and how games affect the society. You are the best, never stop making videos plzz
@DuffTerrall9 ай бұрын
I just checked, and I've only got 3.5 hours in SOTL, but it already left a huge impression. Early on you are fleeing through an old hotel, and go through the remains of a civilian camp. I'm running down a hall, feeling the pressure of being separated from my squad, and a figure runs around the corner. No time to think, just act. Shotgun. BAM. Bogey down. It was just a woman. A resident in fear, desperately running from the chaos of war. If it's hesitated she would have run away, if she'd been a threat and I hesitated is be dead. I had to put the game down after this, because it hit so hard that I had just accidentally killed a non combatant out of sheer stress and fear. Well done, SpecOps
@erikheijden98289 ай бұрын
Lol it's just a game, who cares. You didn't kill or hurt anyone (well maybe yourself...)
@mechanicalmonk20209 ай бұрын
Oh man war baaad Or something
@royartorius9 ай бұрын
I had been thinking of this one scene from Family Matters lately where the son wanted to join the police force his dad was on. He was so proud of how he well could shoot even after his dad told that some of the cutouts in the shooting training were dressed up as civilians. Later, he had his son go through the shooting training again only he replaced a civilian cutout with a cutout of the son's sister which the son only stopped shooting after shoot this cutout. Father went "you just shot your sister" Powerful lessons that people just don't think about.
@kaksspl9 ай бұрын
@@erikheijden9828 So what it's just a game? Dumbest argument ever. Art is meant to make us feel things and games especially are a great safe space to explore what we'd do when put in certain scenarios. To explore our own instincts and emotions. And seeing yourself act in a disturbing way can be disturbing.
@LukeCypert9 ай бұрын
You stopped at the right time. It gets way worse than that!
@talhaim68019 ай бұрын
As someone who grew along side war all my life you see things differently. As a kid me and my friends were playing call of duty and it was fun, we did it sometimes to escape reality as games should do. As I grew older and held an actual rifle - firing in training with tears in my eyes, it helps you see the world differently and especially those games. The actual noise, recoil, dust, heat, it is something that video games have never been able to pull off and shouldn’t (for obvious reasons), to see death with your eyes (something that a lot of my friends suffer from) or just hearing every other week that another friend around my age died while fighting… Its kinda nice hearing about a different game that open your eyes to those feelings without actually taking you to a war zone.
@thecoolestofthe834s29 ай бұрын
honestly ive been in combat too but this game isnt it the phosphorus scene wouldnt happen and the game is just wow you kicked the puppy after i forced you too horrible 6 days in falujahs campaign does it better in no game have i had an actual door kicking experiance where a kid with a sten gun is the caliphates strongest soldier and by golly gee are you gonna kill him j just like i did irl and there is no "omg morality moment" you just tag him one of your guys laughs at his mom crying saying "theres your ISIS super soldier look bitch" the other pukes then gets shot at by terrorists i swear they used the exact house was the one i kicked where a very similar thing happened
@MillBRoo5 ай бұрын
@@thecoolestofthe834s2😂😂😂 Sounds like something I'd hear straight out of Generation Kill. Little Isis Super soldier
@KnighTiggles9 ай бұрын
It's cool to see you do a video on the softer art/narrative side. Your videos are often pretty mechanically focused (and excellent) but I appreciate the change of pace
@good-sofa9 ай бұрын
Piracy is, as always, a great way to preserve art
@erikheijden98289 ай бұрын
Sure... for "preservation" lol
@good-sofa9 ай бұрын
@@erikheijden9828 well yeah, how do you even play most old games right now without paying millions for original hardware and game copies on eBay or something like that?
@AugustRx9 ай бұрын
That's why I horde indie games for future generations
@good-sofa9 ай бұрын
@@AugustRx the hero nobody will ever know
@matthewjones67869 ай бұрын
@@AugustRx Don't suppose you snagged Volta-X before it was delisted? A very obscure one, but one I regret not playing.
@CDyR20209 ай бұрын
Gigantic kudos for nailing such a huge concept within Metal Gear that's often misunderstood, and yes, Spec Ops is indeed a modern masterpiece.
@baczuszek44529 ай бұрын
Man, that hurts, I've never played the game seen it countless times in YT videos praising video games, always skipped those parts cause I wanted to buy it and experience it's story some day, never managed to due to other titles going in the way. And now I won't be able to experience it, like, ever? That's devastating
@rikamayhem9 ай бұрын
You still can, but you'll have to pirate it or play a second hand physical copy on an old console. Don't feel bad for pirating a game that's not even for sale anymore.
@baczuszek44529 ай бұрын
Yeah, I might need to consider that, as you said there is no reason for feeling bad about pirating a game you can't even buy.
@guguigugu9 ай бұрын
avast ye matey!
@PutkisenSetä9 ай бұрын
Old Humble Bundle keys might be floating around if you're the collecting type.
@persey72419 ай бұрын
Someone else in the comments mentioned that he got it through a Humble Bundle just the other day, so it might be worth a try
@Ramaxx959 ай бұрын
Still have my physical xbox 360 copy (so glad it's backcompat). I remember liking it when I first played through it but hating how some of the choices you have are forced to always have a gruesome outcome, which by the time I finished the game I muttered to myself: "It wasn't my fault". But upon replaying it, seeing how the game makes you choose through actions instead of quick time events/dialog options, noticing subtleties in the levels/characters and watching retrospectives/analyses of it, I started respecting the game even more. It has some flaws, but it's a game everyone should experience at least once.
@sj_bardplays64169 ай бұрын
Having no volition in a horrible experience can definitely be a stumbling block for the medium in attempting to do this kind of thing. So many developers keep grasping unto film one to ones in narrative conveyance but the distance between character and passive viewer in that medium lends itself to this narrative better than an interactive experience.
@idontwantahandlethough9 ай бұрын
you make a great point.. many of this type of game would probably work better as a movie. If the gameplay isn't compelling and you can't actually do anything about it, then that's kinda the same as sitting in a movie cinema and watching, not being able to do anything about the characters on screen.
@GuardianOwl8 ай бұрын
Well, that's the thing, you do have volition, but you just believe if that choice ends in failure, then you have no choice but to do the bad thing. That's the an excuse a lot of people that commit war atrocities use, I HAD to do it. Even in the infamous WP scene, you have the choice to attack the camp with firearms. It will eventually end in failure after sniper climb to high ground and take you out, but failure always has to be an option if your sense of honor or morals mean anything to you. There has to be an action you would rather die than do.
@StompinPaul9 ай бұрын
I played Spec Ops a while back. I remember thinking it ran into the problem a lot of games run into when trying to do 4th wall breaks or meta-narrative, which is blaming the player or trying to make them feel guilt for things that are required to continue the game. Like 'turn off the game' I don't think counts as a valid option most of the time, because that's not a choice within the space it's exiting the space. You don't stop the in-universe war crimes in Spec Ops by turning the game off early, you just stop your own perception of them. I think the choices they give you and the horrors presented might have worked better through a lens of 'this stuff is fucked up' more than 'you should feel bad'. But that is my perspective. Either way, I'm sad to see it go, or at least become harder to acquire. Whatever I think of the details, it's definitely a thought provoking game that brought important issues to the fore.
@Paintbait9 ай бұрын
It was really important to me as I played it in 2013. In 2012 I did a combat tour in Afghanistan. I saw and participated in some pretty horrible things. Put a gun in my mouth and pull the trigger to stop seeing them every time I close my eyes things. This game helped me, somewhat, come to a finality over how I felt equally for things I did as the things I saw. The ending where you put a gun in your mouth and pull the trigger acted as a proxy - a fucked up outlet for that impulse. Convincing myself the mortars I called for in Afghanistan never did what the mortars did in the game helped the mental bleeding a bit until I could get help and properly work my way through those feelings. In some ways overblowing things I did to the level of the things you see in the game helped me walk back from the edge a bit. I felt like that monster, maybe even rightfully so, but understanding the gulf between a monster and feeling like one is quite wide and there might be room to heal. I don't know, maybe it was a stupid game, I haven't picked it up again since 2014 or so and conflating my own problems with it was a silly way to realize I badly needed help. Killing yourself at the end of game should feel shocking not relieving.
@axelromanpereira73509 ай бұрын
I went into this game back in the day excactly as descibed in the video. It came to me via a friend along with a few other shooting games. I had no idea about its plot. The transformation of the story as you progress through it was subtle but I often caught myself thinking "what the hell is going on here?" By the time I reached the end, I was blunt. completely speachless. I remember it to this day as one of the best games I've played when it comes to storytelling. I keep recomending my friends to play it yet they think it is just another shooter, despite my attempts of telling them otherwise.
@relvean56269 ай бұрын
What I love most about Spec Ops is that the game just completely refuses to let you feel like a hero, like most other games do. It is, I'd argue, the only game where you play as an actual terrible person. Most other games, even when you play as bad people or you can make terrible choices, at least let you justify your actions on some level or signpost the choice as bad. Meanwhile, what makes both Walker and the Player horrible in Spec Ops is that you want to be a hero, which leads to more suffering than you could ever cause intentionally. But most importantly: There isn't even the option to be "good". Walker will always be a monster, what does that make you? Edit: clarified my position on the relation between player and Walker a bit.
@fleshchild9 ай бұрын
If there's no choice for the player to avoid bad things happening, then there won't be any guilt over their actions. What's the purpose of understanding the anti-war seniment if understanding it has no bearing on the actual game? It actively removes the player from the equation, turning it into yet another linear roller coaster, but this time with text saying "Don't you feel bad yet?" plastered on the walls
@adrianruiz11399 ай бұрын
@@fleshchild I never got this argument about choice. Has anyone that played a CoD or Battlefield game ever wished they had the choice to stop the war? Why would you expect a deconstruction of military shooters to have said choice? All Spec Ops did was follow the script military shooters follow, but removing the glorification and propaganda.
@relvean56269 ай бұрын
@@fleshchild The point isn't "don't you feel bad" the point is more so "why do you keep going even though we won't give you the savior narrative that you want?". If you genuinely believe that you are not at fault, the game let's you express that by shooting Konrad at the end. You are not at fault for Walker's crimes, but the game wants to make you question your relation to them. Are you an impassive observer or are you a bit more involved than you'd like to admit. Both are equally valid responses.
@postaldudeirl9 ай бұрын
@@relvean5626 this is exactly why i think its pretentious, i dont know anyone who plays call of duty games ( or any games for that matter) to feel like a 'hero', people just wanna shoot shit! its a cool idea but it feels pedantic in the fact that its taking itself so seriously in doing the bait and switch thing.
@fleshchild9 ай бұрын
@@adrianruiz1139 The game follows the script to such a point that it wont let itself flesh out its themes. I'm not asking for a "good guy" route, I'm asking for a "Walker sits on his hands until his squad abandons him" route, or a "Walker blows his head off to not be a monster" ending, or maybe even a "Walker cuts the two guys down instead of shooting them" option that *is* in the game, which makes the fact that they didn't do non-binary options like that more often all the more frustrating
@craig12879 ай бұрын
I remember playing Spec Ops: The Line back when it released and being blown away with the direction the game went. I had played the previous Spec Ops games and always thought they were just pretty decent shooters. Then they dropped footage of The Line and it was now third person and I was like, "oh, cool twist" and then when I'd watch developer interviews on Gametrailers and such. The devs would focus on the setting, with sand, and how you could shoot out windows to let sand pour in and such. That was the stuff they focused on, nothing about the story, it was pitched as just another badass shooter. They did so well with hiding the dark turns.
@HumbleAshe9 ай бұрын
I’m honestly glad I got this game on a whim during a sale on Steam; never thought the game would ever just disappear online. It’s a really big shame it’s not available online; the setting of a Dubai lost to the sands is unique but the game also tells a very dark but compelling war story (a video game “Apocalypse Now”) that deserves to be told or preserved for discussions or our own explorations. (At least, for players who can get through the more shocking parts of the game, since it does get pretty gritty.)
@TheFatBastid9 ай бұрын
There is a scene in Hot Shots 2 where the heroes are shooting up the place, killing bad guys, the kill counter is going up like a video game and one of them looks at the camera and says "War, It's fantastic!" While done in jest, the meaning is the same.
@gountberlin16699 ай бұрын
good sir, i am speechless... hands down. not going into details, but you touched something very important here. in a very fair and significant way. much love. keep up the great work
@lordmarshmal_06438 ай бұрын
Hotline Miami has a similar point, I feel, but as I understand it's not just one specific moment that it tries to do this with There's hallucinations, character development that suggests your character doesn't want to be doing this anymore (read the infamous "Do you enjoy hurting others?" line)... but it also goes for the route of slowing itself down and making you take in the sights After every stage you have to walk back through the leftovers of the rampage you conducted - blood splatters, battered bodies, everything - and there's nothing to do mechanically at this time beyond just, walk from point to point, so you just have to soak in the fact that _you_ caused this mess, and you couldn't- no, _didn't_ stop in the moment to contemplate what you were doing ShyCorn did a great video about HM 1 and 2, would recommend
@infernopyromaniac9 ай бұрын
Despite being relatively short compared to some of GMTKs other videos, this is still possibly my favourite.
@ghosthand37379 ай бұрын
I would like to add that even Metal Gear Solid, while heavily critical of the military industrial complex, nuclear warfare and the way governments exploit their soldiers and cast them aside when they are no longer useful, it still falls into the traps of idealizing soldiers as a concept, gushing over how cool military hardware is such as fighter jets, tanks and guns, romanticizing the ideas of military duty and camaraderie, and even downplaying the role of PMC's in sustaining suffering and warfare when it's the MSF or Diamond Dogs doing it. Also the act of tactical espionage action being as fun as it is downplays the overall message, that's a problem that is a burden that games will always struggle with it, how fun/engaging gameplay system is too much that just overwrites the intended feeling that the story wants to evoke.
@dopaminecloud9 ай бұрын
I still don't think fun is a diminishing factor at all. Seems like a low brow write off. Since when is fun the moral meter for anything? We all carry sadism and callousness in our hearts, by default, that's normal. We all instinctually laugh seeing others get hurt in a lot of contexts. We all justify and ignore the incredible suffering of millions to enjoy minor conveniences for ourselves. You think a game has to dodge those twisted sides of ourselves to make a valid point? Are people so blind to self-criticism that they can't simultaneously acknowledge the weight of their responsibility and the fact they feel no emotional incentive to act otherwise? Is that not the scariest part?
@ghosthand37379 ай бұрын
@@dopaminecloud It doesn't completely mute the point of a critical piece of media but it does distract from it, and that's fine, it's okay to do it but it has to be acknowledged as a byproduct of being a videogame and that the ultimate vision for it, even beyond the central critical topics, it's to be fun or engaging, and that's okay.
@theresnothinghere17459 ай бұрын
I fail to see the issue with that at all. The romanticisation isn't just a thing for the player, it plays an in-universe role for its themes and messages. Its what the members of the Diamond Dogs see themselves as and helps you understand their view of the world including how they eventually fell apart at the hands of solid snake.
@noatrope9 ай бұрын
@@dopaminecloudThey are that blind to self-criticism, actually. Truffaut's point was basically the same as the joke about "Excited to announce we've finally recreated the Torment Nexus from the sci-fi classic 'Don't Create the Torment Nexus'".
@NotSoMax9 ай бұрын
spec ops and Silent hill 2 both really changed the way I look at games and what they "could" be. and both are now hard or impossible to play. It makes me realize how important game preservation is especially in this all digital world we live in where we don't really own anything. the problem is only getting worse and it makes me sad to think how many great games may be lost to time or eventually become unplayable.
@vyse49079 ай бұрын
Also I want to point out that reviews at the time claimed that the actual shooting was mediocore at best. It was compared to contemporary shooters and seems subpar in terms of how „fun“ it was. Hard to believe these days, but most reviewers really did not get it at the time. The title was a financial disappointment and never really got the appreciation it deserved outside of a few videos like this one. I found extra credits through their review of spec ops actually because they were one of the few that really „got it“ even back then.
@chyra4519 ай бұрын
Drakengard, Shadow of the Colossus, NieR, and Spec Ops. The OGs of game deconstruction if you want more games like this, love the video
@Lucas-gt8en9 ай бұрын
I did actually quit the game. It was at the “choose one of the hanging lads to shoot” bit. It wasn’t that it was more reprehensible than what I did leading up to that moment, it was the last drop. It felt like the game ‘had won’. I didn’t want to do this anymore. It felt like the point in the story where my imagined self would refuse to do anything but sit down in the sand and let whatever was about to happen to me happen.
@100thdragoon9 ай бұрын
IIRC this is actually a legitimate choice in the fiction of the game and not just its metatext, Walker can simply not choose and that is a valid outcome the ending will respect.
@Bukki139 ай бұрын
Didn't this same thing happen with Driver: San Francisco a couple years ago? (Getting removed from Digital Storefronts)
@youngkhronic22439 ай бұрын
Indeed it did. And in turn raised the price of the game by proxy. I was able to find a copy at a local game store for 80 usd. I didn't hesitate and I purchased it of course for I haven't seen a copy of it in years
@erikheijden98289 ай бұрын
Games get removed all the time
@TrentR429 ай бұрын
The one I regret is an Adventure Time zelda-like. I was unemployed at the time and couldn't spend funds on games. Played it years later on the Vita and wish it was in my Steam Library.
@Bukki139 ай бұрын
@@erikheijden9828 Indeed they do. Marble Blast Ultra for the XBox 360 is another example. This one is made worse by the fact it never had a physical version. (Thank God the PC port exists...)
@Goufalite9 ай бұрын
Alan Wake some years ago too. I also see some old youtube videos being reuploaded or removed due to copyright claims.
@leonardofraga51309 ай бұрын
Wow, that's so weird. A few days ago on Reddit someone asked what game left you emotionaly shattered and I commented SpecOps The Line, which a few people agreed. Then I saw a post saying the game was being taken down from Steam and I already though it was weird that after so many years not hearing about the game, I got 2 things that reminded me of it. And now this, a full video talking about it.
@laurent1489 ай бұрын
You should learn from your mistake and stop usine reddit
@lukelcs89349 ай бұрын
I mean, ofc when it gets pulled from Steam people are going to talk about it, it’s not the first time gmtk has mentioned the game either. Funny how you were reminded of it shortly before tho.
@Creepernom9 ай бұрын
@@laurent148Brother you are in youtube comments.
@laughingseagull0006 ай бұрын
It’s because Google and your phone and all the data brokers spy on you and recommend you things you talked about.
@adisucipto53862 ай бұрын
one of the most underrated title out there. i never forgot how the twist of the story really make me awake at night thinking about all those past actions i did in the game...such an awesome game
@mohamedayman73964 ай бұрын
This game has opened my eyes even more about what is happening in Palestine. Everywhere they initiated a war, they made the locals terrorists and somehow believed it. Taliban were U.S allies, The Irish were terrorists, The red Indians were savages, Russian are fighting the Nazis, Nilsson Mandela was a terrorist, everyone is a terrorist except the soliders that cross the sea to annihilate civilians, steal their homes, natural resources, their future, their hopes, and ultimately their humanity. We kill each other for the sake of politicians who somehow convinced us that we're protecting our neighbors, our homes and our families, BUT the other solider feels the same! the optimal solution is for both soldiers to go back home. but if we do those politicians wouldn't reap the rewards of our death
@wintermute59749 ай бұрын
I feel like I'm the only person who really liked Spec Ops but just completely did not care about the metatextual element. For me it was a really compelling story about a soldier descending into madness and desperation, that made some clever use of genre conventions (like the progressively more agressive and unhinged combat barks). I think that's why I can intellectually agree with many of the criticisms people make of the game's plot while also not being bothered by them. The story was always Captain Walker's, not mine, and I think Nolan North's incredible performance contributes a lot to making him stand as a seperate person rather than just an extension of the player.
@Mantelar6 ай бұрын
The DoD has policies to prevent anti war movies from being made. They have an office dedicated to liaison with film makers. Make an anti war movie, or act as a store front for one, and they’ll never help you again. That’s no subject matter expertise, no access to bases, etc. They will shut you out. Think about it - it’s been 23 years since 9-11. Everyone knows, even guys like me who deployed five times, that it was all for lies. What movies or games have we got that even touch on it?
@cjthebeesknees5 ай бұрын
This needs to be seen more.
@Jimi01029 ай бұрын
Thanks for this hommage, really deserved!
@zelda123466 ай бұрын
I find stories that deliberating condemn or glorify war as fairly shallow because it naturally ignores the lead up to war and the complicated issues at place. War is simply too great an evil to commit for superfluous reasons. It is a moral cost and a pragmatic one. Delving into a little bit of ukraine and gaza will reveal a shit ton of complexity. Some reasons are dumb, some are reasonable, and some are inscrutable to outsiders
@qtCrash3 ай бұрын
I've been replaying through Darks Souls 1 so I initially caught the level design video in my feed, but then I clicked your channel because I wanted to avoid spoilers and saw this. So glad I picked this game up in a steam sale not too long ago! Had no idea it was de-listed, only knew when you mentioned at the start. Ever since last Christmas I've been picking up so many games that I played during my child and teen years, and a lot of them not even really playing too much of. It's just nice to own them and look at the art and reminisce. I used to always own physical games because I was a console player growing up but now my steam library is like a scrapbook of different times! Love that they don't take it away if you own it. Great video!
@hausstaubmilbe74 ай бұрын
7:55 The video seems to imply here that the execution animations are a necessary evil of the game's genre that sneaked past the narrative designers. I think it's noteworthy that these start out quite professional and efficient but become more brutal and even sadistic as Walker's mental state degrades. I think that they absolutely serve to support the game's story and message, not to glorify violence and provide some shallow fun for the player.
@HKIHNDKNSI3 ай бұрын
yea the executions make me cringe
@HKIHNDKNSI3 ай бұрын
epecially the way his voice gets filled with anger and hatred the further the story goes
@AlexOlinkiewicz9 ай бұрын
Won't be long when we all start singing "Do what you want 'cause a pirate is free, You are a pirate!" when it comes to Digital-Only goods.
@arsenii_yavorskyi9 ай бұрын
not if the game relies on the company's server.
@_zaaphiel9 ай бұрын
@@arsenii_yavorskyi improvise, adapt, overcome
@GregorianMG9 ай бұрын
@@arsenii_yavorskyiKinda reminds me of how someone revive a nfs (insert years here) where they have the game and the server to play it again.
@kingawsume8 ай бұрын
"Can you remember your squadmate's name?" was one that got me.
@masteroftheart55489 ай бұрын
That Truffaut quote reminds me of a story I heard that when Kurt Vonnegut told his wife he was going to write a book about his war experiences she told him not to because there was no way to do it that didn’t make war look appealing.
@silentdrew76369 ай бұрын
That would certainly explain how Slaughterhouse Five became Nazi propaganda.
@masteroftheart55489 ай бұрын
@@silentdrew7636 wait what?!? What the FUCK did I miss? I know the firebombing of Dresden became a thing nazi apologists in Germany try to use to both sides stuff but do they cite Slaughterhouse Five?
@heret1c3859 ай бұрын
The biggest problem I had with Spec Ops was that I had no choice. I don't feel bad about the actions I took in game, when I was forced to take them. I feel way worse, when a choice backfires on me in BG3 for example.
@afriendlyfox9 ай бұрын
From my point of view, there's little difference between Mario shooting bananas at fantasy creatures and a soldier character shooting at enemy characters. Both bear no resemblance to what actual war is. It's not just about the shooting people part, it's about being shot, it's about others wanting to kill you, it's about fighting for your life. Also, every war is different, is going on for different reasons and really complex. Saying just "war is bad" doesn't convey meaningful information. Wars don't start because someone naively thought it was good. I think no medium can capture this accurately.
@drmajalis15839 ай бұрын
All the people criticizing Spec Ops: The Line for not giving you a "choice" in committing the various horrible acts are frankly missing the entire point of the game. The game is a criticism of the military power fantasy, where your actions are ultimately heroic, and necessary, that criticism would completely fall apart if you could "avoid" using the white phosphorus. The game is trying to say "you want to be the hero so badly? here's what that actually entails!" and people got mad the game essentially didn't let them be the hero. It's ironic.
@tigercrush22539 ай бұрын
Exactly. Like, Walker yelling about how Konrad "made him" do these things. Joker blaming Walker for "making" them into "fucking killers." The whole point is that everyone involved is complicit, and players who think they get a pass from that are missing the thesis statement of the game entirely.
@gctypo28389 ай бұрын
When most people think about "games about choice", they think of Telltale/Dontnod/David Cage "choose your own adventure" games with a tree of a storyline. Spec Ops is about choice in a different way. It's less about the choices you make, but rather _the act and context of choosing._ It's why whenever Walker is confronted with doing the terrible things he's done, he repeats to himself "I didn't have a choice" - the very same sentiment going through the player's mind.
@OhNoTheFace9 ай бұрын
So a useless point since it was forced, and "just quit" means I would get my money back right? Exactly. Lazy stuff some people like to pretend is deep. They made a mid game and hid behind this
@Ouvii9 ай бұрын
I like that kinda. It's frustrating and unfair but it tells a good story. I even went back and tried to kill all of the enemies in the white phosphorus section, but the game eventually started spawning an infinite amount of snipers which kill you nearly instantly. I've been in similar situations with games like CoD4's big Chernobyl fight but those eventually end. No matter how hard you try with war though, sometimes the only results are bad ones. Kinda reminds one of some of the current rhetoric in the current Palestine situation where Israeli supporters say that Palestine never backs down and never stops attacking so of course they have to fight and oppress them. Obviously I don't know literally every detail, but I wouldn't doubt that the events that fuel that rhetoric are true. "There's always a [good] choice." "No, there's really not."
@drmajalis15839 ай бұрын
You don't need to refund the game, but you can recognize what the game is trying to convey and keep that in mind as you continue. Would you also criticize the movie Fury for "forcing you" to watch the various warcrimes committed in the movie by the American troops? And, the game might be throwing tomatoes at the game industry and by extension, the player, but it's also remarkably graceful to that same playerbase. After all, what's one of the third wall breaking loading screen messages? "You are still a good person." That's talking about the player, not Walker. @@OhNoTheFace
@F2t0ny9 ай бұрын
I had so many opportunities to grab it for $7. I'll just have to remember my experience playing it on ps3
@paultapping95109 ай бұрын
unrelated, of course, but ps3 emulation is quite mature now
@F2t0ny9 ай бұрын
Indeed
@Maximum4329 ай бұрын
To answer the question, "What does playing this game say about us, about the games that we choose to play?" Absolutely nothing! It's fiction. It's possible to enjoy wargames while disagreeing with jingoism and the military industrial complex.
@ttpbroadcastingcompany.44609 ай бұрын
EXACTLY! There are other FPS games that show you the brutality of war, but don't dwell on it too much and are just fun to play. Like World At War.
@calastyphon34149 ай бұрын
I really appreciate how you cite the articles throughout the video
@bluegargantua7 ай бұрын
That mortar scene actually soured me on Spec Ops a bit. Did I choose to blow up those civilians or *did the game make it impossible for me to continue without doing so*? I suppose you could just quit the game then and there but a game should let you see the outcome of your choices. When the game later tries to shove it back in my face like I’m supposed to feel bad, it doesn’t land because that scene was essentially railroaded. I still thought overall the game was good and it’s theme was a real change of pace even if it didn’t quite stick the landing.
@TheEvilCheesecake4 ай бұрын
You were just following orders, you could say?
@torinriley75699 ай бұрын
The way I always saw the choices the game forces you to make, and the things it makes you do, is that its intended to drive a split between you, the observer, and Walker, the main character. Its particularly blatant in the white phosphorous scene where you see his face reflected in the targeting panel, as well as in the cutscene following where your perspective shifts to a handheld camera POV as to suggest that Walker himself is the driving force for all of these acts while you can merely spectate. The ending in particular makes that separation pretty apparent.
@FayDFlourite119 ай бұрын
Sad to see games being taken down, even though i think Spec Ops is overhyped for nothing.
@yurareigiryu9 ай бұрын
Sad to hear. What Spec Ops: The Line has that those other games mentioned didn't is it's subversion. They other titles you know what you're getting into by the box art or the trailers. Indie games like Undertale are almost expected to go against the norm. Specs Ops is genuine in what it tries to be and turns it on its head. Its one of those games where not having fun is the way it's meant to be played. I've never played the game, but I remember the discourse at the time. I always get it mixed up with Black Ops. I deeply respect what it wanted to say and appreciate that it existed.
@jacobmonks37229 ай бұрын
If we're talking from a purely gameplay standpoint, SOTL is actually quite fun to play. But I don't think that sullies its point at all. I actually think it works better because of it. If the game wasn't fun, then it would be unequivocally telling the player they shouldn't be playing and that they should not enjoy simulated violence. That would be a pretty shallow and self-righteous message. But the contrast between the fun gameplay and the atrocious actions of the character is supposed to make the player feel conflicted, to pose a question on simulated violence and why we enjoy it. Because we do enjoy it. Everyone does, even in its most mild form of stomping on Goombas. If the game was unfun, it would be denying that part of human nature.
@freddyready87568 ай бұрын
I do like how it brings another side to war. But some thinks too highly of its anti-war goals, as this is just another shooter too, for your entertainment. But it felt as a joy with new aspects of war. As people say this goes against call of duty and other games, when it could blend well into those games as well. Also would be cool if spec ops had its own series of games.
@wtfserpico9 ай бұрын
The problem with Spec Ops: The Line is that the moral choices weren't choices. The game completely lost me when it forced me to drop WP on the civilians because I didn't have a choice. No matter how long you fight the enemies keep coming and you simply can't progress in the game until you do Bad Thing. As soon as I realized that I MUST do Bad Thing it stopped making me think about the consequences of my actions and made me feel like I was being beaten over the head with its message. I've talked to people about it in the past and they come at me with "You could have chosen to stop playing." which is a huge cop-out, but they are right in a way. I should have stopped playing because I hated every second of the game after that because all I could see were the rails I was on.
@NINisTR19 ай бұрын
Same haha
@jmcalcy699 ай бұрын
If buying games isn't ownership, then pirating games isn't stealing
@Knight-Sky-Games4 ай бұрын
I own a copy on my steam account still and I wanted to check it out again. still had my save from 2012. Only have 5 achievments left. I probably didnt know at the the time how impactful this game was on me. Messed me up and set me straight at the same time. Great video man.
@paultapping95109 ай бұрын
wait what? Between this and gta the games industry really needs to work something out with the music industry. Perpetual licences with perpetual percentages perhaps. SO:TL is unbelievably important both for videogames and as a full-fledged piece of art in itself, it being inaccessible is utterly inexcusable. Also, I believe the film Threads is a good refutation for Truffaut's statement regarding war films.