Moleculoman wrote:I think ones perspective on this will be shaped by a couple factors. A lot of us who grew up playing arcade and console games had no choice but to credit feed and little by little make small improvements. We got stuck on a certain boss or stg and hit a wall. You eventually break through and now its the final boss. He seems impossible, overwhelming etc. There is a great sense of accomplishent and exhiliration when you finally beat the game by the skin of your teeth. It made you want to do it again and do better. This is the long and hard road to mastering the game.
As others have mentioned already, you lose some of that with save states. Emulation has been a godsend for making obscure stuff more accessable, but using saves states, I think robs the player of the the experience of playing "in the moment." At least for games you truly love and want the best experience possible. I don't use save states for shooters, as I've found that playing from start to finish allows you to find out new things, from mistakes you make, doing something different that scored higher. Finding out that gun you thought was shitty is great for this one section. You rarely ever find these new strats or tricks with states, especially if you jump to lvl 4 and focus your play that way. You're more in the zone when playing from start, vs jumping directly to a stg cold turkey.
That being said, I DO think save states are beneficial AFTER you've conquered a game the ole fashioned way. You still keep playing from start to finish, and use states to jump to a particular boss that you've beaten already to try out new strats etc. As already stated, it saves time versus playing from the beginning.
TL/DR ver. = Play the game as it was meant too. Work in save states to practice, but still regularly play through the game as much as possible, keeping save state usage to a minimum.
The experience that someone has and what they get out of the game is completely up to them.
I can't speak for everyone else, but save states certainly didn't stop me from finding new things or developing new strategies.
Play the old fashioned way? When practice mode and level select are included in the game by default, should you just not use it at all and then start over every time you die in the same area? You may feel the need to put an arbitrary limit on yourself but some people like to make better use of their time.