Maybe you got a degree. But now you can only Drink Coffee, Print Document, Staple Document, Hole Punch Document, Shred Document, or Answer The Phone (Ultimate Ability). And most people will settle for it, because deep down challenges scare them. And they're really good at stapling after hours of doing it.
People want to feel special for excelling at a below-average system that they're capable of but offers nothing in the way of actual development.
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »The game design waaaay back was around TES in an MMO environment so the controls were to mimic that as well as a few spells or actions being accessed. Because of this....you have those few options or bars
That's pretty much the reason.
How would having more abilities using a controller even work. What else is there on a controller to map the additional abilities to? I'm genuinely curious.
Though I just see this as another way PC "Elitists" might think, cause they have a whole keyboard to play with.
For people that want to press as many buttons as possible - I found a perfect input device for ya:
NewBlacksmurf wrote: »The game design waaaay back was around TES in an MMO environment so the controls were to mimic that as well as a few spells or actions being accessed. Because of this....you have those few options or bars
That's pretty much the reason.
Is it that, or is it because the game would be impossible to balance if you had access to all those skills?
Or is it because there's no cool-downs in this game so you don't need 40 skills.
Or is it because they wanted choice in abilities used to be an important thing, thus, theoretically, increasing build diversity.