Problem with that is that if I paid for a game, I don't expect anyone to tell me how to enjoy it.
I enjoyed Mystery Dungeon, but it got old fast tbh. Not enough new mechanics after a few hours @Wafer
The problem with the analogy is also easily apparent. Not all chefs are good chefs. Not all developers are good developers. Not all food is good. Not all games are good.
normally i wouldnt want a chef to tell me how to enjoy my food, then again ive never had the experience lol
so maybe id have to see what thats like
I can have a chef tell me how am I supposed to enjoy it more, but not force me to enjoy it that way.
And that's what Nintendo does. They force you to enjoy the game how they thought.
It's like asking for a burger without tomatoes.
That's why you can't play Splatoon 2 in the maps you want, that's why you can't choose the track you like when playing MK8 online...
The chef says "but they add a nice flavor to the rest, and provide good texture.
I tell the chef "They taste like ass, and I'll vomit in your shoes if you put it in the burger."
choosing stages would make some of em less populated, harder to find a game, take more time, etc.
And the chef will put the tomatoes in the burger anyways
If the chef was Nintendo, they'd put it in the burger and tell me to suck it up, because the burger is better in his shoes than in my stomach.
lmao
But @Wafer that's what happens in all the games. There will be stages that will be more liked and others that will be less liked
I remember when a chef told my gf the chicken was supposed to be dry
She berated him for half an hour about that
And it's ok
Biggest regret of his life to utter that sentence.