1001001indistress
1001001SOS
1001001indistress

I know the feeling, because this is the way I feel about a lot of games nowadays - just cramming in things and its tutorial after tutorial for moves that I won’t use/will probably find a workaround for.

However, I don’t remember Oddysey being complex at all, which likely means that I, as usual, ignored anything that

It’s weird, because I feel like 64 is good and fun, but doesn’t flow quite as well as its predecessors do. I can start Super Mario/2/3/World without issue and it always feels immediately fun and gratifying, but I can’t quite do that in 64.

I think the problem is it puts its muchness front and center. That big intro

Electric Griddle vs Foreman Grill vs Toaster oven.
Oh, wait, here comes Hot Plate with Portability! 

My guess is the game is pronounced “Gatch” and the T is added to ensure connect pronunciation. 

I don’t see why not, all of the blocked statements seem to be directly offensive terms. Besides, isn’t the 2020 slogan “Keep America Great?” 

I know there are going to be official storage expansions, but I believe you’ll still be able to plug in a regular USB drive to use as extra storage. It probably won’t be good for gameplay, but it should at least serve as a way to keep a game you want to play local, so you can move it back onto the internal drive when

Now playing

I thought this generation’s chipmunks was the post-modern take where you slow the music down to the point where the voices just sound normal.

I may be wrong, but isn’t Like a Dragon a different gameplay style than the previous Yakuza games?

as far as launch lineups historically go it’s looking much more decent:

There are two Tiers of EA subscription. The more expensive tier includes new games as they release, the cheaper tier offers a bunch of older games, as well as 10 hour demos* of newer games, as well as discounts on newer games. The Xbox subscription includes the cheaper tier.


*Demos of single player games likely to have

The easiest explanation is that X and S aren’t the console Model, they’re the package identifier for the console model - like an LS vs LT package on a Chevy. Most Chevys will have either or, but a Cruze is a Cruze, Malibu is a Malibu, and a Trax is a Trax, just as an Xbox 360 is a 360, One is a One, and Series is a

Pro tip: On google, typing Minus and the Term you’re looking to exclude (-XL) will attempt to omit pages that contain the term. This is incredibly useful if you’re looking for something and google keeps populating the same wrong search results page after page. 

It’s worth noting that there are at least 15 noteworthy revisions in P1 through P5. :D

These are the names of the current and forthcoming Xbox consoles, in order of reveal:

This is nice. The cheaper tier of EA Access has been a godsend, as a 10 hour demo for new games has helped out a lot for trying things I enjoy that I didn’t think I’d like, or for skipping out on games I might have bought because they sounded cool when they really weren’t.

The Series S at $25/month for two years comes

So, it looks like MS is moving forward with models of “X is Large and Powerful, S is Small and Less powerful. So S and X aren’t Product Names so much as Model indicators. Xbox One X and S are both still Xbox Ones - Easy enough to understand. The problem is that they called the new console iteration is essentially “X

Oh, I agree. The post is more in direct response to the hyperbolic idea that the OP wouldn’t buy an Xbox Series Console because they still can’t understand the naming convention, drawing it out as if it’s some kind of complex concept to understand. 

I’m mainly a PC gamer, but I generally keep a “one of each” mentality. On top of that, What’s important to me is that a game is fun. I’m not a big graphics person - I think the xbox 360/PS3 was the last time we saw a console upgrade with impressive returns. The One/PS4 wasn’t all that much of a bump, and it looks like

To someone who doesn’t do a lot of Gaming, I can see the confusion. It’s the same thing with the Wii and the Wii U.

But if you’re on a gaming website enough to post comments, and don’t understand the simple difference between
Xbox One S/X
and
Xbox Series S/X
then you might want to consider a less complex hobby.

It seems like it was quite common in the 80's. Buy up the rights to produce a bunch of toys and build a series around it. Tonka did the same thing with Bandai’s machine robo, turning them into the Gobots. The reason you don’t see any Gobots reissues is because Hasbro doesn’t own the rights to the toys, Bandai does.

Fun