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- photonrider
I am glad I found this thread as I was thinking of starting a "Praises for GT6" or some such thread myself.
There'll be plenty of threads like this as new members start pouring in via Google. So it's a good thing you didn't.
........................the best part about it for me is that it feels like a GT game again ...........
Yes. many would feel that way; I do, too.
..........................(where GT5 felt the least like one out of them all).
GT5 was somewhat of a surprise - and having played through both Versions 1.00 and 2.15, I realised the changes that not only evolved throughout that development process, but also the subtle programming that took place in our minds providing the ground-base for the introduction to GT6 - which in a way is nostalgic GT and yet sort of a 'new' GT.
It actually takes me back to the feeling (in a way) of the first game, which to this day was the best experience of them all, the one that for me defined the feel, the "GT" if it all. I am enjoying that feeling immensely right now and hope it lasts.
It's been years, really, since I missed the feel of playing GT4, and even GT3 (which latter, to me, was the hardest) but suddenly I feel a lot happier - it's like they took my GT4 away and gave me a brand new polished copy with stuff I couldn't even imagine I wanted.
Racing on Apricot Hill at night is truly breathtaking & the replays make rewatching gameplay a must.
I have hundreds of movies saved in GT5 - as you may guess then, I'm making movies like Cameron and Spielberg rolled into one. The replays also help me examine the tracks in minute detail, an obsession I confess that has now considerably worsened. Easter eggs? Haha. Galore. Comparing the movies between GT5 and GT6 shows me what was added and subtracted. I'll be looking forward to seeing Jenkins again. Or not.
I'm also getting a nostalgic GT4 vibe with the remixed menu music which brings back awesome memories.
There is a lot of nostalgia in here. I played GT4 a few weeks ago, and when checking out my garage (I had the urge to thrash the Bentley Speed 8 around El Capitan) and my kid comes bounding up to me with "What's that? What's that? I know that song! OMG, I used to love that!'
I laughed and told him it was a game I played a lot while he was growing up.
I just finished getting my National A and unlocked the Lunar Missions - he is going to throw a fit tomorrow when I make him drive around the Moon. What better way to teach him the terrain?
The little touches here & there are truly making this game hard to turn away from. I just cant stop playing.
I stopped playing just now, to take a Rum and Coke break. It is very hard to stop. If not for the fact that I have been playing since 5.00 P.M (it's 4.00 A.M. right now where I am located) and a bit tired I would just keep playing till I keel over.
So much driving to do . . .
The licence tests were loads of fun since I had company - the four friends on my friend's list are all closely matched with me, and we are having a whale of a time trying to shave milliseconds off each other's times.
Obviously when we go online together we'll be racing in a pack - and that's about as close racing as I could hope for.
There is a lot of thought that was put into the game - and when I got that letter from Lord March . . . just for a second there I forgot I was a middle-aged family man with life's daily problems - I was the rookie racer, gradually working my way up - and now they want me to train on the Moon. Good. I'm ready.
Edit: (added)
Well they obviously kept the actual oil changes and car washes, but the point is there is no animation once you choose an option like in previous games.
Not the same kind of animation for sure - and nowhere like the animation in TDU2, where you actually had to sit around and some guy even comes and talks to you. There are plenty of characters around, too. What I find strange though is that GTAuto seems to be situated in quite an elevated area - a penthouse garage. There must be a glass elevator taking the cars down . . .
And talking about raindrops on roses, and other favourite things . . . there are suddenly a lot of gals in the game - women spectators, that is. Hm.
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