What platform should i get battlefield 3 on
According to this article, which quotes the studio head, Robert Bach, there are numerous differences between the PC and Console versions of Battlefield Limitations caused by hardware requirements causes the maximum number of players in a game to vary between versions:.
The biggest difference between the PC and console version of Battlefield 3 is that we have 64 players on the PC and 24 players maximum on console We tried to get more players in [to the console version] but then you need to scale down all the graphics, scale down all the destructibility, and sometimes you need to scale down all the map sizes.
Alterations were also done on the maps themselves to make them work better for smaller numbers of players:. And to be left standing in a parking lot as another oblivious teammate peels out of the base in an otherwise empty Humvee is to remember that, after all, you are still playing with a bunch of idiots in their dorm rooms.
Playing the game is only part of the equation. Trying to play the game is the other. The total Battlefield 3 experience is bound up in a nightmarish front end called Battlelog, which is part social network, part server browser, and partly functional.
It is undeniably cool that you can log onto the page from any computer to check up on your stats and see what your friends are doing. Battlelog also shamelessly exploits the pull of progress bars and unlocks, giving players a treasure trove of data to pore through. The quick match option, which allows you to set filters to launch your preferred gametype with one button, never worked once.
The server browser was my only option, yet entering any game was still a matter of refreshing the server list, attempting to join a game that had one spot available, and being told that it had already been filled. Often you work with a squad, but there are no tactical dynamics at play. You just follow one of your faceless comrades to the next shooting gallery.
How bad does it get? Battlefield 3 , then, is fighting a two front war. One against Call of Duty , and the other, on Origin's behalf, against Steam. Its absence from Steam shows which fight matters more to EA. It'll be interesting to see how this plays out, given that PC gamers profess to despise Origin almost as much as they claim to loathe Activision and Call of Duty. You can contact Owen Good, the author of this post, at owen kotaku.
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