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If you just want to shoot stuff, then that's fine; I prefer to do so in games like Far Cry , which sticks to its combat core and doesn't promise many aspects just so it would mostly fall down to shooting (and I still praise that part here btw).
It seems like you are the "weirdly entitled" one since I still gave it a thumbs up and praised some of its qualities.
Protip: Try to comprehend the written text or ask me about my opinions on other games before you make random assumptions. You don't need college for that.
Everybody's entitled to their preferences and opinions, but it's a big city, choom. Sometimes a map marker means you can have a fun gunfight and get some loot, and a lot of people actually enjoy that, even if it apparently sends you into rants and clumsy metaphors.
Protip: knowing a handful of College Words doesn't necessarily mean that using them is always better than just, like... talking.
Well, I acquiesce to your eulogized use of words about my ruminations!
I think you expressed your ambivalent relationship with this game quite critically and unequivocally *puts the thesaurus down*
Hey! Thanks for stopping by and sharing your thoughts!
The world surely is fun to explore, especially for the first time, as wandering through all the varied districts is great; in that regard, it might offer more than The Division you liked! Sound design is definitely great, but I just pointed the varied languages and compositions, as those stood out the most to me (and you'll hear them at every corner).
Cyberpunk 2077 definitely shares some of the The Witcher 3's shortcomings you mention with the open world, but the former fails at making them as varied, so it feels worse. As for the inspirations from Deus Ex , some narrative-driven quests that touch these topics are even better, I would say.
I personally think the unearned hype surrounding it partly doomed it from the start, followed immediately by the stupid decision to rush release on clearly unfinished product purely to make their nVidia sponsor happy and therefore shovel more underperforming and wildly overpriced hardware at the masses, which Cyberbug inadvertently adequately exemplified the reality of overhyped Ampere every bit to match reality (30 series=cyberbug release, by 2024 A.D. they'll have fully come to terms with how much a ripoff it was as its buggy drivers and 8gb of VRAM fail to run games at even 1080 ultra. Ampere and Turing should've been $100 cheaper, Lovelace $400 cheaper)