One of the additions I like least in Spider-Man 2 is the web wings. The Spider-Man games, in general, have often strived to provide the best facsimile of the protagonistās preferred mode of transportation, web swinging, so adding something like gliding to the mix is a bit of an affront to me. Itās a personal preference, but thankfully, I can mostly ignore the skill and just get around the old-fashioned way. I often forget it even exists.
However, while I was looking through Spider-Man 2ās various options to see if there is a way to turn off the visual wind-tunnel effects (there doesnāt seem to be), I did find something that might only appeal to strict swingers like myself. And thatās a Swing Steering Assist slider.
Roller coaster design
This probably wonāt come as a shock to you, but Spider-Man 2 takes a few creative liberties with physics to provide an approximation of the way the webslinger moves in the air. I mean, the comics already have to do a lot of handwaving to try and explain how he even does it, but weāve already bought into a radioactive spider biting a guy and making him strong, so having him swing through the streets of New York is comparatively easier to believe.
However, for the game, Insomniac went a bit further with things to ensure that you look cool while traveling. These assists consist of a lot of minor details that you might not even notice while playing. Like, for example, if your swing is too long, the web line will shorten so you donāt hit the ground. When you go around a corner, the line doesnāt wrap to cause an abrupt change of speed and angle. Itās a lot of behind-the-curtain magic, so you can just concentrate on where youāre going rather than have to worry about distracting details.
Itās not a bad thing. Beyond the fact that Insomniac is trying to reach an extremely broad audience and having a steep learning curve just to get around the city would be extremely alienating to a lot of people, game design is sometimes like building a roller coaster. The goal is to make it feel like youāre doing something awesome and skillful when youāre really not. Itās why QTE sequences became so popular for a while.
Spider-Man 2 subscribes to the roller coaster design philosophy so hard. Even the combat is designed to look very intricate and technical while being extremely simple. It works, and in Spider-Man 2 it works very well.
Can you swing from a thread?
However, if youāre someone like me and you really enjoy web-swinging, you might not want the handwaving that is there to make you look cool. You might want some additional technical chew to the experience; something more tangible that forces you to concentrate a bit more on what youāre doing. And, if thatās you, thereās a slider buried in the options that might be what youāre looking for.
The Swing Steering Assist slider has ten levels to it that you can use to tune your experience. Because the assist is already designed to be very subtle about the way it helps you, it can be difficult to tell where it steps in. If you crank it all the way down, however, you will definitely feel the difference. The most significant change is that youāll actually be able to swing into the ground, and youāll more regularly smack into obstacles until you adapt.
Itās important to note, however, that this doesnāt make web-swinging physically accurate. You still have a lot of control in the air and can easily alter your trajectory. The secondary abilities like weblines, slingshots, and point jumps are all still accessible and work the same. I also donāt think you can wrap around horizontal obstacles. For example, if you swing under an arch, you wonāt suddenly be launched into the sky. There are limits, but we can keep dreaming.
I also want to stress that Iām not trying to posit this as the ācorrectā or even a ābetterā way to play the game. Within the context of Spider-Man 2, itās probably the opposite. This is just a personal preference, and I figured that there are probably others out there like me who love Insomniacās take on locomotion but just want it to be a bit more involved.
Published: Oct 23, 2023 06:01 pm