The re-release of Mass Effect reminds me of something I first noticed in Mass Effect 1: if you can get through the opening 20 hours or so, the rest of the game (barring a few boss fights) is a cake run. That's really become the norm now in games, particularly RPGs. I just finished Trails of Cold Steel on hard and it managed to stay hard for the first two thirds but still, run-of-the-mill enemies in the last three chapters could hardly ever even damage me and certainly never posed an actual challenge. In many games, I don't even bother advancing levels or spending my skill points simply because I'm already beating the tar out of the game, so why take the time to get more powerful?
There are definitely exceptions to this. I don't remember Divinity: Original Sin 2 ever backing off the difficulty, for example, but the exceptions are fairly rare now.
Has anyone heard developers talk about why this is happening?? Are they doing it on purpose for all those people that want to "feel more powerful"? Maybe games are balanced around players skipping lots of quests so, by doing most of them, I'm getting ahead of the expected XP? Maybe they expect players to put the game down for weeks at a time and forget how to play optimally so the act of learning to play and actually remembering what I learned is messing it up?
Whatever the case, it's getting more and more under my skin.
There are definitely exceptions to this. I don't remember Divinity: Original Sin 2 ever backing off the difficulty, for example, but the exceptions are fairly rare now.
Has anyone heard developers talk about why this is happening?? Are they doing it on purpose for all those people that want to "feel more powerful"? Maybe games are balanced around players skipping lots of quests so, by doing most of them, I'm getting ahead of the expected XP? Maybe they expect players to put the game down for weeks at a time and forget how to play optimally so the act of learning to play and actually remembering what I learned is messing it up?
Whatever the case, it's getting more and more under my skin.