Kevroeques
Kevroeques
Kevroeques

I've found that most games are cheaper on Amazon than they are in shops or on PSN. Take a look- I think I saw Uncharted for about 15 bucks on there not too long ago.

Agreed- I only have 3 games for the Vita, but I still play it, and even if nothing on the market interests me right now, I know other future games will. I had a similar experience with my PSP. A little while later, more games were being released, and I played it plenty. I still have the little bugger, although I

I agree. To me, there's no replacement for a dedicated gaming handheld.

And Fire Emblem: Awakening. I was much more impressed with it than I thought I would be. Great strategy, great characters.

Quite on the contrary, the 3DS has way more must play titles than the Vita if you're not blatantly against Nintendo as a company. I have both systems. 22 3DS games (not including regular DS games), 3 Vita games- only one of which is not a port (Gravity Rush, which is actually awesome). I'll agree that Nintendo's

I don't think a game should be allowed to be made unless the developers can convince us that they plan on seeing their game become a classic, that people will play over 20 years later, without it fading away when people bore themselves out of their wallets, like the actual Mario 3.

"Levy's an experienced gamer."

Cool- now announce some original content.

At the same time, I feel that the consumer base has been somewhat molded today, somehow. Expectations are easily predetermined and met, and complaints are often a given, and quite vestigial at that- as though no matter how satisfied people are by the product, they'll find something to nitpick just to sound

I'm aware of that- I just see the climate as being more harmful to those that take risks and propose radical new ideas than it used to be even in the late 90's/early 2000's- when multimedia had a comfortable stake and thus a rush of creativity. I guess we're getting off topic by now. I was really just reacting to

I know how marketing works. It has nothing to do with the popular items making money as much as it has to do with smaller producers and products making less money, especially when it comes to the involvement of risk. Big budgets, popular icons and ideas have always made the most money, and have relied heavily on

Thank them for making all of the games you obviously love. It's a 2 way street. While they should be thankful for your patronage, you should be thankful they made the product. If you're a patron of their characters, from another producer, then why should they be thankful? You should also be thankful that they're

None of you little internet era children seem to understand the very reason you get to enjoy big budget games and wonderfully illustrated movies- copyright laws. Yes, we all would like to have the ability to gain whatever items we want, and preferably free. However, if you take away the protection that preserves an

Well, I saw this coming. Glad I snagged a few before the doors were welded shut. Kotaku's story on these was the reason I found out about, and as a result bought them.... however, it was also a nail in the coffin of the production. Anyway..... can I interest any of you in a few collector's items? Not cheap,

I was hoping he wouldn't make the Turks, but...... he made the Turks. I don't have the money right now, anyway.

Meh- I actually liked Metroid: Other M. I feel the series is just beyond its calling. It's not an original story to younger people, and doesn't hold a candle to most other sci-fi games in that respect (action, blood, etc), not to mention the original creator is dead and as such, it plays like fifth fiddle in

If you watch DBZ in Japanese, there are tons of parts that were silent and music-free, with none of the added filler dialogue, and simply the sounds of the wind, or other background noises. I don't think a lot of newer anime fans in the west (and yes, I know this isn't anime, but a real animated movie likely would be

But being that Metroid is about setting, atmosphere and suspense...... it really makes perfect sense. All in all, I could only see a Metroid animation being a success in the eyes of the fans if it were merely an animated walkthrough of the game, with lots of panning and such as we saw, with most of the animation

There was one. It was called "Captain N: The Game Master". That is how 80's and 90's commercialization viewed the video game world. It would have likely been more Ninja Turtles than Aeon Flux.

While I see Satanism to be somewhat of a satire religion of sorts given the way any of its followers describe it, I do find it strange that the name would be censored anytime after the middle ages. I'm sure they'll revoke the censoring. Have they tried "Hitler"? That name seems to evoke more emotion than Satan's