I’ve spent four hours playing Rage today via the Xbox Series backwards compatibility. (Is it emulation or real hardware?)

Anyway, for an Xbox360 game I think this looks really good and still holds up today. The speedy loading times certainly help as well.

I did try and play a while ago on the PS3. I don’t know if Rage was pushing the PS3 to the limit, but as you turned around, you would catch models and textures loading in. Apparently you could alleviate this a bit by installing an SSD but you’re still limited by the PS3’s older SATA connection.

Having played this on my Series X, I don’t know if the Xbox Series is almost void of this because of the modern hardware or if the Xbox360 version was actually the better machine with this game engine.

I completed Rage 2 a year or so ago when it was given away free on the Epic Game Store and loved it. The original game is essentially the same but on a much smaller scale. It’s a balanced gameplay of driving and FPSs sections.

I LOL’d on my first encounter when I’ve if the bad guys shouted, “Where’s that wanker!” 😆

    • AzureKevin@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      As far as I’m concerned, RAGE is a modern game. It even looks and plays like a modern game, so it can’t really be retro.

      To call it retro is like saying League of Legends is retro because it came out in 2009.

      • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        I’m speaking my age but in my head retro is frozen in time to be anything prior to the year 2000 😂. That’s just my opinion

      • M500@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        For me retro is ps2 gen and earlier.

        360 came out when I was in university, so for me, that is jumbled into my adult life.

          • M500@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            Thinking about it more, I like to draw the line there as everything after this generation had some level of internet connectivity. Also PC ports started to become common during this time.

            Once the internet got involved i think gaming in general started to get worse with all the dlc, and micro transactions.

            So the golden age of gaming, for me, is ps2 and earlier which I like to think of as retro.

      • B0NK3RS@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        No not really but it’s all subjective anyway.

        I remember RAGE we good the first time I played but I really struggled with it last year when I tried it again. Also John Goodman voiced a character at the beginning and then buggers off never to be seen again…

  • tombruzzo@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    The gunplay in this was really good. The AI was responsive and enemies had plenty of animations.

    Those wasteland mutants you first fight would dodge out of the way if you aimed down the sights at them, jump off things, and throw this boomerangs at you. There was too much fluff between gunfights but they were a highlight for me

  • narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    Games using the id tech engine were often affected by visible texture pop in, and apparently the PS3 version was affected more than the 360 version, but the latter still was noticeably affected. Rage uses id tech 5, but I remember playing BRINK (id tech 4) on PS3 which had no mandatory install (it ran from the disc without installing anything to the HDD upfront), but used the HDD extensively for caching texture data. After I upgraded from the standard 5400 rpm HDD to a 7200 rpm HDD I remember texture pop-in was noticeably reduced.

    Xbox 360 emulation on Xbox One or Series isn’t really accurately emulating the hardware, instead it translates the original code to something the One and Series understand.

      • narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee
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        2 days ago

        I’m not 100 % sure how it exactly works, but I think Microsoft recompiles/translates the games and you then download the changed binary instead of playing off your disc (which is also why texture streaming should be a lot faster).

        This is most likely a process that’s automated for the most part though. And I highly doubt it’s recompiled from source, that’s why I called it “translated”.