Dota and League of Legends. The moba format simply doesn't click with me. Them being hyper competitive doesn't help, and I'm someone who played plenty of UT2004 during my late teens
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Nobody hates LoL more than LoL players.
Real time strategy games are not my cup of tea. Nothing against anyone who enjoys them, understand, but they're basically exercises in who can do the clicky clicky faster. Give me a turn-based game any day... where you actually have to out-think versus out-click your opponents.
Oh, and any game that pits console players against PC players. Yes, let's put the 'stock controllers only' console players up against the PC players with $8,675,309.00 of custom equipment and every cheat they can get away with. Sounds like a reasonable plan. Overwatch, I'm looking at you.
That depends on which RTS you play, Aoe4 has one pro with 120 or so APM which would be unthinkable in StarCraft, strategy is much more important.
I somewhat exaggerate. They can be fun, but turn based is more my style.
Not sure if this even a beloved game, but Assassins Creed Unity. The setting has so much potential but the story feels so slow and I find it boring, the controls took some frustrating time to get used to and Paris is just not a very visually compelling place to be at. I used to love AC2 but Unity... idk
Rouge likes. I just can't get into them. The only one I was able to sink any kind of time into was Hades. I actually enjoyed it a decent amount, but I find the gameplay loop for roguelikes just wears me out pretty quickly
Sonic games, I'm referring specifically to the first one and that era.
My friend and I rented a Genesis I believe it was, specifically to play this, we thought the graphics were awesome, the speed was amazing, the t3ch show off was cool, the game had novelty.
But really from a gameplay perspective, I simply do not understand what people like about it.
The whole thing was just run as fast as you can down this path, you have no idea what's coming up. There will be multiple opportunities to take different paths but you don't really have time to make a judgment call, so you flail at the controller and end up hitting a hazard. You start the level over and over and over again and you repeat it until you understand which way to go and then you complete the level.
Now you've run into every single gotcha and you figured out some optimal routes, now you can play it all without dying a lot.
Why would anybody want this?
That is part of why people like sonic games i think. Replaying a level over and over again to get the fastest possible route to complete the level (usually the top path, which is also the hardest as it's easy to fall down to the bottom). It should also be noted that the games don't like the players holding right all the time and will punish the players if they didn't react in time.
This is not simple platforming, the classic games are a little.... different? Idk the word for it, but compare sonic and tbe other platformers like mario, it is extremely different, which is why not a lot of people "get" sonic. I've had some people looking over my shoulders when i play a sonic game and was told "i don't get sonic" which, all things considered, is understandable.
I think the problem is that the old Sonic games are kinda contradictory. "Gotta go fast", but you're punished if you don't know the whole level layout. It promises speed, but it fills levels with so many speedbumps that end up making the game feel hella slow. Plus, water levels. Fucking water levels in Sonic are the worst.
I love Metroidvanias, 2D platformers, and generally even games that came before them that were similar in style but don't meet all the Metroidvanias criteria. But I really really kind of dislike pretty much all of the Mario games. There's a delay in the control scheme that makes timing difficult for me, and I can't seem to get over that. I actually gave away Mario Odyssey because I couldn't really play it well at all after about 10 hours. For me it's not intuitive despite my like for both 2d and 3d Metroidvanias style games.
Cuphead.The art is very beautiful, but I think the gameplay uses just plain repetition to achieve the difficulty, and I'm not a fan of doing the same thing again, again and again.
I don't actively dislike it, but for me RDR2 is also the main one. Apart from competitive shooters etc which aren't really my thing either. The thing is, I like the type of game that RDR2 is. But I just have nothing with the setting. I played it right after Cyberpunk, which I loved for multiple reasons. One major thing is that I controlled V, and thus could create my own story. In RDR 2 I was forced to play someone I have nothing in common with, who does exactly the things I wouldn't do, and who lives in a shitty time period where basically every woman basically has the same rights as cattle. That may not be inaccurate, but it just didn't vibe with me. I just got so frustrated with the main character talking shit to people who were right, or drinking a lot and getting into trouble in a very predictable way. Despite the beautiful and interesting world I just couldn't feel anything but frustration.
I do get why people like it though, I don't think it's a bad game. Its just not for me.
Sekiro: shadows die twice
I love Japan. I love Samurai, and old times. Fired up the game and found out it has some dark souls mechanic bullshit, that makes it a grinder.
I am an adult. With very limited time for games. I have to have quick saves I can't be grinding shit. I simply don't have the time nor the desire waste time grinding.
Really sucks because the game looks gorgeous and I liked the start of the story...
Hollow Knight
Apparently not that much of an unpopular opinion though reading through the comments.