Summary

Realism is something I’ve seen gamers wish for often. They not only want games that look realistic, but want them to behave in realistic ways. But, is thatreallysomething that makes a game better? For the most part, I don’t think so.

What You’re Actually Asking for Is Authenticity

What I think people are asking for when they say “realism” is actually “authenticity”. What’s the difference? Well, look at a game likeCall of Duty: Modern WarfareandBattlefield.These games are not realistic in any sense. The bullet physics and how weapons work is completely wrong, and, of course, you can’t heal bullet wounds by crouching behind a low wall for a few seconds.

However, they strive to be authentic, and look and sound the way you expect. That doesn’t mean the portrayal looks like the real thing, but it looks the way you expect it to. The way guns sound, characters move, the environment is modeled, and other surface-level details of the game create the impression of realism, but it’s the attention to authenticity that does the trick.

Call Of Duty Mobile Screenshot

Realism Is Rarely Fun

Video games are, presumably, meant to be fun and entertaining. Now, I’m not so narrow-minded that I don’t understand that people can find just about anything fun. Heck, I’ve even heard some people go and walk outside for fun. I believe its called “hiking” or something.

So yeah, there are games that have a strong focus on realism, and there are people who really enjoy them, but these games tend to be niche. Let’s take theARMAseries of games as an example.

A screenshot from Arma 3 showing realistic military action.

This is a game franchise that focuses on ultimate realism. Get shot once, and you’re done. Bullet physics are close to the real world, tactics matter. You might go through an entire mission without pulling the trigger once, and then have it end in a second from a shooter you never even saw. Why? Because that’s life, and life ain’t fair. To me, that’s not necessarily fun either, but there are people who love it.

Realism Only Matters in Service of Gameplay

For more mainstream games that are meant to have wider appeal, realism definitely has its place, but its use needs to be careful. In a game likeKingdom Come: Deliverance 2you need to manage your character’s hunger and bleeding, which feels realistic, but of course, in real life he’d take weeks or months to recover from his wounds, not a few bandages and some potions.

So realistic touches like these should serve the game being good, and make the gameplay better. If you do it for the wrong reasons, then you end up giving players tedious busywork. So before you complain that something in your game isn’t realistic, think about whether making it realistic would have made the game any better.

kingdom-come-deliverance-ii-press-image-12.jpg

Unless You Want a Simulator, Which Is Its Own Thing

Justin Duino / How-To Geek

If what you want is a proper simulator and not an actual game, there’s nothing wrong with that. Simulators have plenty of hardcore fans, and I myself dabble in racing and flight simulators.

If you want a type of game that balances simulation with fun gameplay in the most elegant way, then what you’re looking for areimmersive simgames. Which, in my opinion, are some of the best video games to exist.

Razer Blade 16 with GeForce RTX 4080 laptop GPU running a racing simulator.