Still, being nostalgic of those days, I love manuals where I find them. Wikis, community and video tutorials are the new standards in this respect in the gaming industry. reading straight through a cover to cover manual.Īgreed. Click links and open them in new tabs when you don't understand something, read that page, then go back to the first and keep going. The way I read through the wiki is like this: Just open up everything from the main menu one at a time and start reading. But these days the vast majority of people (especially gamers who can afford a good enough PC to play games) have tablets/smart phones, so even that excuse doesn't hold up. It is superior in every way except for situations where digital doesn't help you. The wiki is a digital, searchable, categorized manual. There is the wiki of course.but it is still pretty much WIP and tutorials will take a while to come up. I loved reading long manuals that used to come with games back in the days, most of them were always full of interesting stuff, tips, historical fun facts, even stories.and so on. Some games, like HoI4, don't even come with one.Īs a gamer from the old days.I find this sad. Some developers do make manuals but these "manuals" are mostly installation instructions/some points and tips in a 2 page leaflet. Originally posted by Priyon:Sadly most modern games have stopped arriving with manuals.
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