JohnGreenArt
JohnGreenArt
JohnGreenArt

Do the games upscale or run at improved frame rates or anything? Aside from the convenience, I’m just wondering if there’s any noticeable difference from the games running on the old hardware.

LEGO previously did Toy Story sets. You can probably find a Woody minifig secondhand.

Computer, create an adversary capable of defeating Data.

Saying Zack Snyder likes to release movies in March kind of means nothing when his Man of Steel was released in June.

It’s not just that A movie is released in March, it’s that a SEQUEL is released in March. The first Matrix movie came out in March. The second film came out in May. When the first film came out, The

“Why would you not compliment yourself after cooking a delicious meal? You’re the one who made it happen.”

That’s the OP’s point—that if you make something, and then compliment yourself for it, that you are“saying so yourself.” The guy in the video did not create the 3D mode, so he can say it’s cool, but he can’t “say

I really liked Banner Saga as well, but I think the combat could’ve used some refinement. I liked the systems they had in place, but I think it needs tweaking so that it could be a bit more fun (while retaining the gloomy atmosphere) and not feel like the enemy was always getting in cheap shots.

Wait, this game isn’t about Dark Souls slash fiction?

“Walking everywhere means discovering things you’d never see or notice under normal circumstances.”

It also means countless backtracking.

The game is not designed to show you everything. So many missions, be they story missions or side missions, have you going to and from the same areas, AND via the same routes. You

Yeah, the setting plays a big part. My first Far Cry game was Blood Dragon, which I loved. Then I started playing 3, which I did enjoy: it played the same as Blood Dragon, but felt very different because of the tone, the music, etc. Then I played Far Cry 2, which I really liked (other than it also being too friggin’

That’s not their duel in Cloud City.

Dang, when I first saw this set I was really hoping the mechanic would be that Han lowers, swivels, then rises back up. The “lean back, swivel” mechanic doesn’t quite have the same feel as slowly lowering Han into the carbonite chamber.

Still, it looks like a decent set. Hopefully LEGO will make a companion set for

This just reminds me I’ve been meaning to pick up Sublevel Zero.

Is this actually VR or is it just a POV video? The camera didn’t seem to move around when the viewers moved their heads.

I’m not disagreeing with you that the asteroid chase would work in an Indiana Jones movie, per se. But with my example of the invasion music from Episode 1 sounding like it would fit Indy, it can only sound like it would fit an Indy movie because there had already been Indy movies. When I saw Empire Strikes Back, the

Empire Strikes Back came out a year before Raiders of the Lost Ark. The asteroid chase theme might be fitting for an Indy scene now, but in 1980 there was no Indiana Jones movie for anyone to say John Williams’ Star Wars music sounded like.

Overall this game was pretty solid. The story and comic-style cut scenes are kind of nonsensical and not really up to par with the rest of the game, but the rest was good. It’s not a long game, but some environments wore thin a bit. There’s enough level variety throughout, just you linger in a few areas too long.

Dammit, I thought this game was called Navel Action.

So much this. It KILLS me that Bethesda barely worked into Fallout 4 some (if any) of the obvious improvements Obsidian made in New Vegas. The companion wheel, for instance, is so much better than the system in Fallout 3, 4, and even Skyrim. It’s one thing for Bethesda to not incorporate things that modders add over

Good to know!