Szerintem a QTE nem egyenlő látványos akcióval, ami időre menő döntés eredménye. vagy nem is tudom, hogy definiáljam. Az ilyen egyszerűbb cuccok, mint a kar meghúzása is ebbe a "családba" tartozik. S ezzel nem vagyok egyedül:
Ready at Dawn’s Marc Turndorf was asked how frequent QTEs are in the game.
I don’t have a specific answer to that, but once every 3-4 minutes?…No! As much as necessary…There are many kinds of QTEs. There are really compelling ones at the end of a boss battle or just a melee encounter which makes it more gratifying and gives it some branches which are really fun.
Turndorf then explains that while there are indeed many QTEs in the third-person shooter, the studio didn’t go “crazy” and added it every couple of minutes.
Then there are some little things like opening a door and things like that. There are plenty in the game, as many as necessary but we don’t go crazy like “Oh! It’s been 4 minutes, we don’t have a QTE we need a QTE ahh! What are we gonna do?!” It’s not like that. We tried to place them in compelling manners that users can really enjoy.
Sőt! Ők még csak nem is így hívják.
A good few minutes of our first proper look at The Order, the PlayStation 4's high-profile, big-budget exclusive, pass before we see anything resembling traditional gameplay. Even then it's brief - a short, staged shoot-out in a crowded Whitechapel alleyway where third-person cover-based gunplay gives way to a fist fight before our hero Galahad crashes through a weak timber roof. Except it's one of those fist-fights, as Galahad's actions are brought to life via on-screen prompts that, when pressed in the correct order, see him reaching for a knife before plunging it into a rebel's neck.
This isn't a QTE, though - or, rather, that's not what developer Ready at Dawn is calling it. In their parlance it's "branching melee", whereby failure at any stage in the process simply sends you down another path. The knife isn't the only option open to Galahad, and the fight can be concluded in many more ways. All of which sounds very much like a QTE, albeit a very generous one. It seems it's not just in The Order's twisted take on Victorian history that there's been some slight revisionism and a little bending of the rules.

