• Tech News
    • Games
    • Pc & Laptop
    • Mobile Tech
    • Ar & Vr
    • Security
  • Startup
    • Fintech
  • Reviews
  • How To
What's Hot

Elementor #32036

January 24, 2025

The Redmi Note 13 is a bigger downgrade compared to the 5G model than you might think

April 18, 2024

Xiaomi Redmi Watch 4 is a budget smartwatch with a premium look and feel

April 16, 2024
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest VKontakte
Behind The ScreenBehind The Screen
  • Tech News
    1. Games
    2. Pc & Laptop
    3. Mobile Tech
    4. Ar & Vr
    5. Security
    6. View All

    Bring Elden Ring to the table with the upcoming board game adaptation

    September 19, 2022

    ONI: Road to be the Mightiest Oni reveals its opening movie

    September 19, 2022

    GTA 6 images and footage allegedly leak

    September 19, 2022

    Wild west adventure Card Cowboy turns cards into weird and silly stories

    September 18, 2022

    7 Reasons Why You Should Study PHP Programming Language

    October 19, 2022

    Logitech MX Master 3S and MX Keys Combo for Business Gen 2 Review

    October 9, 2022

    Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen10 Review

    September 18, 2022

    Lenovo IdeaPad 5i Chromebook, 16-inch+120Hz

    September 3, 2022

    It’s 2023 and Spotify Still Can’t Say When AirPlay 2 Support Will Arrive

    April 4, 2023

    YouTube adds very convenient iPhone homescreen widgets

    October 15, 2022

    Google finishes iOS 16 Lock Screen widgets rollout w/ Maps

    October 14, 2022

    Is Apple actually turning iMessage into AIM or is this sketchy redesign rumor for laughs?

    October 14, 2022

    MeetKai launches AI-powered metaverse, starting with a billboard in Times Square

    August 10, 2022

    The DeanBeat: RP1 simulates putting 4,000 people together in a single metaverse plaza

    August 10, 2022

    Improving the customer experience with virtual and augmented reality

    August 10, 2022

    Why the metaverse won’t fall to Clubhouse’s fate

    August 10, 2022

    How Apple privacy changes have forced social media marketing to evolve

    October 16, 2022

    Microsoft Patch Tuesday October Fixed 85 Vulnerabilities – Latest Hacking News

    October 16, 2022

    Decentralization and KYC compliance: Critical concepts in sovereign policy

    October 15, 2022

    What Thoma Bravo’s latest acquisition reveals about identity management

    October 14, 2022

    What is a Service Robot? The vision of an intelligent service application is possible.

    November 7, 2022

    Tom Brady just chucked another Microsoft Surface tablet

    September 18, 2022

    The best AIO coolers for your PC in 2022

    September 18, 2022

    YC’s Michael Seibel clarifies some misconceptions about the accelerator • DailyTech

    September 18, 2022
  • Startup
    • Fintech
  • Reviews
  • How To
Behind The ScreenBehind The Screen
Home»Games»“Telltale will remember that”: Why New Tales from the Borderlands dropped the infamous conversation prompt
Games

“Telltale will remember that”: Why New Tales from the Borderlands dropped the infamous conversation prompt

September 3, 2022No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
"Telltale will remember that": Why New Tales from the Borderlands dropped the infamous conversation prompt
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The Walking Dead, Game of Thrones, Batman, The Wolf Among Us, Minecraft, Borderlands, Guardians of the Galaxy… the reign of Telltale Games, at its peak, was truly something to behold. Between 2010 and 2016, the studio churned out a number of games that defined the conversation in gaming. You couldn’t open a gaming mag (or navigate the homepage of a gaming site) without something from Telltale making itself known. Its games were everywhere, all of the time.


Until they weren’t. The studio hit critical mass, and the quality of its games suffered: from 2017 onwards, after a restructuring of the studio that affected the cadence of its releases, the studio fell from grace. In trying to recreate the magic of The Walking Dead, Telltale creatively suffocated its staff and homogenised its output. A series of gaffes soiled the company’s reputation. As quickly as the world fell in love with the studio, it forgot about it. The second season of the Wolf Among Us, as well as a planned Stranger Things game, were cancelled.

But that’s not to say there’s anything wrong with the formula: in fact, quite the opposite is true. During its height, people loved Telltale because it harkened back to an era of classic, narrative-focused adventure games. You don’t sell 28 million-plus episodes if there’s something fundamentally wrong with the way your games work, do you? To that end, you can see why Gearbox Software partnered with “key alumni” of the original Telltale Games narrative team revisit one of the most cult titles in the studio’s back catalogue: Tales From the Borderlands.

See also  Minecraft Legends is full of character, oozes authenticity, looks brilliant… and is a bit like Brutal Legend

“Working with some key alumni from Telltale, you know, we spent a lot of time talking about his genre. We asked ‘how does it work? What are the best practices?’ But, also, then, we want to do something that is special and unique to Gearbox,” says Lin Joyce, head of writing at Gearbox Software. “How are we going to scaffold on to that – keep what works, push this genre forward into places it hasn’t yet been? To show what more it could do?”

Meet Fran, Anu and Octavio: your band of unlikely misfits.

Joyce tells us that, to this end, the team made some pretty big revisions to how the Telltale formula works. Perhaps the biggest change that she outlined was getting rid of the text prompt in the corner of the screen that tells you ‘[a character] will remember that’. It just didn’t fit with Gearbox’s vision – even if it is a key trope for games of this ilk.

“We went away from a dialogue from saying ‘so and so will remember that’ because we now have access to [better] technology,” says Frédéric Scheubel, producer at Gearbox Studio Quebec. “We shot everything using performance capture. So, the intention was that the impact should be felt through acting, not prompts: if you offended a friend, or if you made a friend joyful, you’ll see that through acting.”

Scheubel concedes that this means more work for the player; you need to be invested more emotionally (or at least more actively) in the game to see what impacts your choices are making, this time around. You can’t just tell an obnoxious lie and have the game say “you probably shouldn’t have done that”. You’ll need to use common sense and emotional intelligence instead.

“It gives some work to the player, to understand ‘okay, what choice did I make? And what moment will this influence?’ It’s something we’ve intentionally focused on to improve the user experience.”

If you get bored of the more straight-forward narrative, you can play with figures to settle fights.

The graphics, and the animation/performance capture, are top-tier.

And you’ll need to ask yourself this quite frequently in this, the spiritual sequel to the first Tales From The Borderlands title. You’ll control three brand-new characters to the universe; the altruistic scientist Anu, her ambitious, “streetwise” brother Octavio, and the pissed-off, capitalism-weary Fran. They’re each having the worst day of their lives, and they’re all losers. The interplay between them is central to the game – as you’d expect from a title in this genre, in this franchise – and you’ll need to manage their relationships if you don’t want to become just another dead cog in the unstoppable megacorporation machine.

New Tales From the Borderlands actually seems like a breath of fresh air for the series; by focusing on the ‘little guy’ rather than the superpowered Vault Hunter or the wise-cracking CEO sociopath, Gearbox has the opportunity to inject a bit more humanity and humility into the series – whilst still getting to pop a joke or two in that now-traditional Borderlands style.

Sometimes, you’ll see things from just one character’s perspective.

Telltale games ran their course in the 2010s, but in discarding the tropeiest bit of the formula in favour of something altogether more human, we may just see – once again – why the genre became so influential in the first place.


New Tales from the Borderlands releases on October 21, 2022 for PlayStation, Xbox, PC, and Switch.



Source link

Borderlands conversation dropped inFAMOUS prompt remember Tales Telltale
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Turn ChatGPT Into Your Personal AI Business Coach With This Powerful Prompt

June 27, 2023

Bring Elden Ring to the table with the upcoming board game adaptation

September 19, 2022

ONI: Road to be the Mightiest Oni reveals its opening movie

September 19, 2022

GTA 6 images and footage allegedly leak

September 19, 2022
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

Digital break-up equipment to assist ladies get out of unhealthy relationships safely

July 16, 2022

Why Nonprofit Leaders Must Adapt

September 17, 2022

Google focused on making its iPhone apps more iOS native

July 4, 2022

Sharp GX-BT60 evaluation

July 22, 2022

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and Updates from Behind The Scene about Tech, Startup and more.

Top Post

Elementor #32036

The Redmi Note 13 is a bigger downgrade compared to the 5G model than you might think

Xiaomi Redmi Watch 4 is a budget smartwatch with a premium look and feel

Behind The Screen
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 behindthescreen.uk - All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.