10 Annoying Details In Spider-Man Miles Morales You’ll Only Notice By The End

With Spider-Man: Miles Morales becoming a critical darling and one of the best PlayStation 5 launch games, it has been praised for its characters, gameplay, and the seemingly infinite amount of Easter eggs that are still being revealed.

RELATED: 10 Weird Plot Holes In Spider-Man: Miles Morales

However, with great power comes great responsibility, and though the developer Insomniac have knocked it out of the park once again, there still remains several annoying instances where there game’s enjoyment suffers.

10 Length

Though Miles Morales has quickly become one of the best Spider-Man games according to Metacritic, the credits of the game roll surprisingly early. It isn’t a full on sequel to Marvel’s Spider-Man, as it’s being labelled as an “expansion” and it does come with a slightly cheaper price tag, but it’s way too short, clocking in at around eight hours. And compared to it’s predecessor it seems even shorter, being a third of the length.

9 Time Capsules

There are some awesome hidden sidequests in the game, but when it comes to the scattered time capsules, it just doesn’t make any sense. Though it’s fun to scavenge the city looking for these secrets, it’s can be rather annoying. Just like the backpacks in which Peter keeps his keepsakes in the first game, anybody in the city could have found the time capsules, even the ones that are high up or kept on a boat.

8 Roxxon

It’s a brave move for Insomniac to make the main villain of the game a character that casual fans have never heard of and has never featured in a movie before, but it’s also a risky move.

RELATED: 5 Ways Marvel’s Avengers Has The Better Campaign (& 5 Spider-Man Does)

By the end of Miles Morales, after the final battle and Miles has left a path of destruction in his wake that somehow didn’t kill anybody, there are still unanswered questions about Roxxon. Not only that, but the villain just seemed like a stop gap between the first game’s Doc Oc and the villain of the official sequel, which is hinted at in the post-credits.

7 Puzzles

The combat is one of the things that we love about the game, but the same can’t be said for other parts of Miles Morales, especially the puzzles. The puzzles are long and laborious, and much more frustrating than they ever where in Marvel’s Spider-Man. In the first game, the puzzles served as a nice breather between battling enemies, but in Miles Morales, it slows the game down and would be better as an optional side quest.

6 Controls

Adding shortcuts to the D-pad is one of the things you didn’t know you could do, and it’s actually really helpful as it saves a ton of time. However, as there is an uncountable number of abilities and attacks in Miles’ canon, it so easy for players to slip up and trigger something they didn’t mean to do, which can be super annoying when in the middle of a battle.

5 Constant Interruptions

Aside from the aforementioned puzzles, the story is a fast paced, high octane, action thrill ride. Though that sounds exciting, it can become rather annoying. Even while swinging, Miles is bombarded with calls from Ganke, his mother, Peter, his uncle, or even J. Jonah Jameson. As fun as JJJ’s rants are, it becomes almost impossible for players to immerse themselves when swinging with the orchestral music playing due to the constant interruptions. They can be turned off in the settings, but some of them are tied to the story, so there’ll always be interruptions.

4 Glitches

In the time since its release just over a week ago, fans have enjoyed finding tons of Easter eggs and references to other Marvel characters, but what they’ve also found is that the game is riddled with glitches. They aren’t exactly small glitches either, as players have seen Miles turn in to bricks, lampposts, and other random inanimate objects. Not only that, but players have seen the character fall through the ground, leading to them to having to reboot the entire game.

3 Connection to the original

Exploring the map is one of the best tips you need to know, but if fans have played the predecessor, they’ll find that the map has barely changed except for a sprinkling of snow. And though Miles Morales is great for newcomers, it doesn’t serve fans of the 2018 game quite as well.

RELATED: 5 Ways Spider-Man Is Sony’s Best Exclusive Open-World Game (& 5 It’s Ghost Of Tsushima)

Very few of the characters return and it’s annoying that now fans will have to wait another couple of years to find out how Peter Parker’s story continues. However, there is an appearance from Gloria, one of the better minor characters from Marvel’s Spider-Man.

2 Frame Rate Issues

One of the best things about Spider-Man: Miles Morales is its abundance of different Spidey suits, the best of which is the Spider-Verse suit, which lets plays slow down the frame rate so that it looks the the 2018 movie. However, the game unfortunately suffers from a ton of real frame rate issues and lagging. Towards the end, the game can be unplayably choppy and massively hinder the players’ experience.

1 Combat Struggles To Break Free Of The Original

Though the combat in the game is great, Miles controls almost exactly like Peter did in the 2018 game. The biggest new additions to the combat system are the Venom strikes and camouflage, but the camouflage is just an easier way to perform stealth moves and silent take downs. And few players even use the Venom attacks and instead opt to just stick with the original moves.

NEXT: Spider-Man: Miles Morales: 10 Hilarious Memes To Get Hyped For The Release

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