Sony purchased Insomniac, Naughty Dog, Bend, Sucker Punch, Guerrilla Games, and Media Molecule, but OK.
Sony purchased Insomniac, Naughty Dog, Bend, Sucker Punch, Guerrilla Games, and Media Molecule, but OK.
To be fair, they’re more likely to care about Todd Howard’s legacy than Todd Howard.
I don’t think it should take much to understand why the concerns regarding Tencent and people’s feelings regarding Microsoft aren’t exactly apples to apples here.
The issue with Tencent has more to do with them being in the pocket of an authoritarian government.
I guess this spells DOOM for Playstation ports moving foward.
Adding yet another layer of corporate bureaucracy to the mix. Because that’s always makes things better.
The fact that this is Will's first post on kotaku in over two years, and was this bad speaks volumes about the state of the GMG sites. Even the updated article goes on and on about the damn mine.
I tried to read the “corrected” version and still couldn’t get through it.
I will tell you what happened. From Bugalaga airstrip you should have plotted a 126 degrees course to the mine, east-south-east.
I think you’re missing the point Riley.
I like the analysis of games as service and the spooky implications of the technology at play but... this ain't a review of the game, really.
I read half of this review and I still don’t know if the software is any good.
Oh wow. This is quite the screw-up. They gonna leave this review up? The entire tone and substance of the review is predicated on a falsehood. Seems like the author had an angle and went for it. Didn’t see the mine on first attempt and was all to happy run with it.
Dear Will, if you took a second to try and review the *game* Microsoft Flight Simulator instead of the concept of cloud and games as a service, maybe you would have done the tutorial, which would have taught you to fly VFR (which incidentally is the only form of navigation actually included in the tutorial).
Russia’s return to villain status could not come soon enough for Hollywood.
A lot of successful writers have weird tics and obsessions like that which avid readers like and others find just kind of odd. Clancy is all about obsessive detail over military hardware, Michael Crichton would footnote his novels to show off all his research, and G.R.R. Martin painstakingly describes every morsel of…
What not to do with Avatar 2: Make it
Well, let us hope that he watched Avatar to figure out what not to do with Avatar 2. . .
“Lord Cameron, have you considered just letting the franchise die?”