

Tasteful, Understated Nerdrage: A Tale of Two Companies But while the ending is the source of the controversy, I don’t think it’s the source of the problem, and it’s not where the interesting changes take place. That seems to be where a majority of the audience checked out and stopped trusting the storyteller. So much of the discussion of Mass Effect focuses on the ending of the trilogy. Mass Effect: Andromeda has been announced, and so I want to take one last look back over the whole trilogy with an analytical eye and (hopefully) without so much rancor.Īlso be warned that since we’ll be discussing and contrasting all three games at once, there will be no spoiler tags for anything whatsoever. The white-hot nerdrage has cooled, the reflexively defensive fans have moved on, and we have a couple of years of perspective between our expectations, the results, and where we are now.

Today I want to look back and examine the series as a whole, now that we’ve seen it through to the end. You’d think there would be nothing left to say at this point.īut we played and commented on those games in their time. In Spoiler Warning our group covered all three games, in excruciating detail, over the course of 36 hours of running commentary. Yes, I have discussed this series to death over the years. This series is going to run for the next eleven months, and by the end it will be the length of a novel. This series is going to put that idea to the test. For the last few years I’ve half-jokingly suggested that there is no upper limit on how much people are willing to discuss the Mass Effect games.
