FindingWaldo
FindingWaldo
FindingWaldo

This seems obvious. I've had songs from games play in my head plenty of times, even games I haven't played in awhile. Stuff gets stuck in your head. I think it might be a stretch calling this hallucinations though. It just certain elements getting stuck in your head.

After playing video games all children suffer from PTSD. Unless you like that, don't let your children play. More at eleven!

What? Zelda II is widely regarded as one of the worst games in the series? Since when?

Now playing

First the Nostalgia Critic & the Angry Video Game Nerd are hanging out in Tokyo, now the Ghostbusters? WTF, Japan?

So no movie can ever use burning buildings in posters again? It's not even clear that it's a NY building, there's just plain sky in the background. I'm not even getting into the date coincidence because being mad about that it's just stupid.
C'mon guys, it's been 13 years already.

I really wish this game would get re-released so I don't have to hunt down a Sega CD copy.

Okay here's my thing: This trailer shows a lot of action, but the one thing that makes it cool/remarkable is the song from Return of the King, aka The Most Emotionally Devastating Depiction of Sloppy Tomato-Eating In Cinematic History.

Looks pretty sick.

A great deal of the popularity/staying power of this game has to do with the time at which it was released.

I'm going to go out on a limb here (and I may be wrong; please correct me if I am) and say you're not of the generation that was in middle/high school at the time this game was released.

I say this because of the

Spoilers:

This. This a decillion times over.

This was not my first RPG - that honor goes to the Quest for Glory series (which might have been more adventure game than RPG, but I digress). It was, however, the game that made me an RPG fan. I make comics now. I'm a professional storyteller, and I have to credit a lot of early inspiration to want to tell stories

Stopped reading when you called Wario a B-list celebrity. How dare you.

Nah, most likely get behind a proxy and you'll be good to go.

Love the whimsical presentation. I've always a soft spot for adventure games like this one. They remind me of the my favorite childhood books, like Corduroy. Anyway, I'll definitely be backing this one.

Best "How I Work" ever. Thanks Ira for sharing Paul Tough's methods. Frankly, I'd love Lifehacker to do Paul Tough next and see if he's tweaked his system any in the last 20 years. He's an outstanding journalist who has been focusing on education lately both in books ("How Children Succeed") and long-form magazine

These are mine

FUUUU I want this

FUUUU I want this

We're not ready to make a detailed statement about what happened with Yogventures. Winterkewl's statement omits much and I would disagree with a number of points, but there's no value in going into detail.

For the adventure!?