staindgrey
Inkling
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2008
- Messages
- 11
- NNID
- staindgrey
Resident Evil 5 set up a great set of in-game voice commands that eventually became a universal language for Versus and Mercs players. It was doable by simply pressing the B-button and a direction on the D-pad at the same time:
"C'mon!" -- Come to my position.
"Wait." -- Don't go, or stay where you are.
"Go!" -- Obviously, 'go', but also 'chase' or 'move away from me'.
"Thanks." -- Confirmation that the other person either understood you, or saved your butt.
In addition to this, after a voice command is made, the other player can simply tap the B-button to answer with an affirmative. This helps confirm or deny understanding.
I was able to get perfect 150x combos on a regular basis using only these commands with players that understood them. It's surprising how little actually needs to be said to understand one another. And Splatoon has the available buttons necessary to mimic and even modify such a setup.
But, then again, such a system could just be abused and get annoying. Like how people in Versus would spam "Thanks!" over your dead corpse until you respawned. That was always fun.
"C'mon!" -- Come to my position.
"Wait." -- Don't go, or stay where you are.
"Go!" -- Obviously, 'go', but also 'chase' or 'move away from me'.
"Thanks." -- Confirmation that the other person either understood you, or saved your butt.
In addition to this, after a voice command is made, the other player can simply tap the B-button to answer with an affirmative. This helps confirm or deny understanding.
I was able to get perfect 150x combos on a regular basis using only these commands with players that understood them. It's surprising how little actually needs to be said to understand one another. And Splatoon has the available buttons necessary to mimic and even modify such a setup.
But, then again, such a system could just be abused and get annoying. Like how people in Versus would spam "Thanks!" over your dead corpse until you respawned. That was always fun.