Deltath
Deltath
Deltath

I've played quite a bit of this with my fiancée since launch and with the exception of one crash during the starting cutscene of a quest, there haven't been any of these issues.  How widespread are they?

I know everyone likes the little guy vs the big bad developer, but at the same time.. aren’t people tired of the same song and dance? Small time developer takes game code they didn’t make, tries to make something else without to fill some niche, they get shut down. Riot sucks, they do some scummy shit, but these

Well, the concept wasn’t stolen. One of the founders ran Dota All-Stars. But even if they hadn’t, nothing in League of Legends was “stolen” in any legal sense. Don’t get me wrong, they’re scummy for a lot of reasons, but there’s no need to stretch the truth. Games made in the style of/same genre have virtually never

They don't ban you for not playing right.  They ban you for deliberately trolling or being toxic.

Daniel Ahmad didn't confirm anything.  He made a claim based on speculation.  And he's not anymore capable of confirming anything than anyone else.  He's not affiliated with it in any way.  He's just some guy.

Not only would it be easier, it would be better.  The warm tortillas folded into those small rectangles end up sticking to themselves and tearing a lot when you try to unfold them, especially if more than a few minutes passes between when it's packaged and when you open it.

You can’t talk to the randoms in Fall Guys on Playstation either. How is that any different?

Either you did encounter a bug or your overall scores were low enough that losing your fourth meant that you sank to disqualified.

I’ve seen three man teams make it to the finals on multiple occasions in a two hour play session. The point totals are inverse placement values, meaning if there are 40 players (ten teams) that qualify and 60 players total, the person who gets first place will get 60 points, while the person who gets 60th place will

Second, if you aren’t super picky, I think right now an Xbox Series X might be the best bet.”

I’m in complete agreement here. I don’t have any favoritism towards any particular brand, it’s just what’s the point in buying something expensive that’s still worse than my PC (which can already connect to my TV anyway)? I get that Microsoft wants to push hard into this territory where generations don’t matter and

It's not hard to setup a computer so it can run to your TV as well and using a wireless controller is also incredibly simple.  I have mine setup and mostly play Steam games in the controller friendly Big Picture Mode.

Nice article and good list. I haven’t checked out Murder by Numbers but the rest are great. I actually just started Yakuza 7 two days ago and I’m in love.

Anyone who tells you Zero is a good starting place is a damn liar. Prequels are prequels for a reason. It lets loose a lot of narrative info you shouldn’t have when playing the first few games, particularly surrounding one character. I agree it’s a daunting series to get into, but if you do, Yakuza Kiwami is where to

If we’re going to say 2020 shouldn’t have had Animal Crossing, the years you’re comparing it to would have to be considered under the same microscope and all of them had hits that were originally scheduled for different years. It’s just the nature of game development.

You forgot about Good Job! and Part Time UFO under the eShop section, another two Nintendo published titles. Quite gun little games, too.

I think 2020 was a better year than 2018 and 2019, and I think those were both good years.  It really just comes down to what games you like and a lot that I loved came out this year.

Yeah, the game is clunky and frustrating and feels very.. low budget.  I'm a big fan of RPGs, Transformers and indie games but none of that made the game fun.

There’s nothing functionally wrong with the drive being that direction and obviously, from a vertical perspective, there’s no actual up or down when the disc is vertical.  I do agree that it's more common to see the data side facing inward toward the console, but that doesn't mean anything, really.

Maybe I'm the only one, but I've never felt like there were too many open world games.  Perhaps it's because the only Ubisoft open world game I've ever played was Ghost Recon: Wildlands.  And I've only ever finished two or three other open world games before.  In many ways, I still feel like it's kind of an