Face it, all good and well-designed games are well-disguised skinner boxes.
Face it, all good and well-designed games are well-disguised skinner boxes.
If most technology was built locally, however, the creation of more jobs would stimulate the economy (and in my opinion, it would have a very large impact). That would be the first step towards making technology affordable - and not affordable because of the price, but because people would have more money to spend.…
Yes, and?
I can literally feel myself dying as I'm waiting for both of these games to come out.
It's honestly hard to notice that in motion. Just to test what it would look like, I zoomed out the youtube page, set the quality to HD and made sure it was the approximate size of the main screen. And, what do you know? Looks great.
Small screen.
Correct me if I have the wrong interpretation. How is this for the "greater good"? Giving people access to clean air - in cans - because they're too busy wading around in their own pollution? That's collectively selfish.
(I'm actually a Canadian so I might be using "our" and "we" in a rather untrue context. Nevertheless, everything you do affects us as well.)
MGS4 is set in 2014. Close, though.
When you say "a lot of people", though, you mean the minority of gamers. In the grand scheme of things, it seems most people don't really mind it.
He's not a doctor, he just plays one on TV.
So, a more serious and thought-provoking question: much of the content in FFXIII-2 was from XIII because they made way too much stuff. If there is a XIII-3, it stands to reason that they probably don't have as much to work with this time, so they'll probably have to go to the drawing board for a while.
The first Final Fantasy game I played was FFIV, and I want to go back to something that spiritually succeeds that more than anything else. I hate XIII with every fibre of my being.
Adventure didn't start the genre, though. My point of contention is that someone would have been along with an action adventure game if Adventure didn't get to it first.
That's not an insignificant factoid, though. Games would later come to frequently include easter eggs because of the first step that this game took. Action Adventure games would have been made eventually, even if this one wasn't.
Unfortunately, it is your problem, because if you actually had valid concerns about this article and weren't voicing them like a petulant child, I wouldn't be taking thirty seconds out of my day to tell you that the five minutes you took to write a review of a blog article were ill-spent. Lower your standards, champ.
You're kind of annoying.
It's Ubisoft's fault that he had to be connected in the first place. Needing to be connected to the internet to play a game that's offline makes about as much sense as only being allowed to use the toaster while the coffee machine is running. You can't justify DRM measures, bro.
I'd like to know this as well. Clearly this man is an industry insider and knows something we don't.
I say C. Because if you can't see the Internet Police, you don't know if they're watching you.