JohnGreenArt
JohnGreenArt
JohnGreenArt

Apparently changing my password twice did the trick (or it just timed coincidentally with their site working properly.)

So is this working for anybody? I’m able to login to the Uplay app, but it asks to login again when going to download the game and gives a login error. Even after successfully changing my password I still can’t login to the link, or the Ubisoft website, for the download.

I grew up with a C64, and it was definitely frustrating/fascinating to see how arcade games would translate to different home machines. With arcade games there was always a level of compromise expected. Less resolution or colors, fewer and smaller sprites on screen, that sort of thing. It was interesting to see how on

Keighley recently said on a livestream that those Nintendo-based games were pulled because the Japanese gaming giant had never cleared them and issued takedown notices against them. He argued that including them could have made The Game Awards liable for takedowns as well. “It was a bummer to see that happen,” he had

After. Mathison and Ford were married from 1983-2004. Mathison sadly passed away from neuroendocrine cancer just last year.

This is great! I only got to watch a friend’s kid play it for maybe a half hour, but it definitely seemed like one of the best non-movie tie-in LEGO games in awhile.

Considering the size of Just Cause 2, I was really disappointed the Mad Max game’s map was so condensed. It’s so quick to drive from point to point in the game. The convoy battles were great, but could’ve been even bigger and better up everything on the map had just been spread out much further apart.

I can’t tell if that’s a joke, but it’s funny nonetheless.

(It’s “Casablanca.”)

Thanks! That definitely helps.

Eh, that doesn’t sound too bad. I like the occasional game that I can go through within a week and be done with it. Usually that’s best for narrative-heavy games, like Uncharted or Dishonored, that sort of thing. I get the impression The Division is not heavy on narrative. That said, what games (ideally single-player)

Thanks for the info. How short an experience are we talking? If the game were to go on sale for $20, would the single player campaign be worth it?

I am not into multiplayer games, but when The Division had a free trial (beta, demo, whatever it was) I checked it out and I really liked it. I didn’t play any of the multiplayer parts (in whatever “zone” that was) but I liked storming Madison Square Garden, the exploring, finding materials for upgrades, following

The image shown as the “main controller,” the one that looks more or less like an Xbox gamepad: is it the “main” controller? Like, does the system come with that one? The system *has* to come with those detachable controllers, so is the more traditional gamepad included, or a separate purchase?

Also, is the system

Not too cold, not too hot. It’ll keep him Luke warm.

Seems odd to call it “Red Dead Redemption 2" when it’s (presumably) a prequel and technically the third in a series.

That mobster, he just gotta move these refrigerators.
He gotta move these color TV’s.
That ain’t workin’, that’s the way you do it.

The question of the Imperial logo pertains to just how old her character is. If that flashback she has is during Episode II era (which it would have to be, if the character is indeed 32 years old like the actress), then that guy shouldn’t have the Imperial logo on his hat. If, however, her character is supposed to be

It really just comes down to the look of the troopers and whatnot. All black is one thing, but the helmets don’t look prequel-era. They just look closer to original trilogy Stormtrooper helmets to me than something from around Episode II’s time. Plus the guy has the Imperial symbol on his hat. Granted, the Republic

Sure, memories aren’t necessarily accurate, but in a visual narrative, unless the story specifically calls out an inaccuracy in a memory or a flashback, what the audience is shown is not expected to be false. The excuse could be “she’s remembering it wrong,” but on a storytelling level, why choose to show us she’s