I'd say the use of the Metro GUI for anything other than a mobile/touch device is pretty high on the list, though maybe that's just me.
I'd say the use of the Metro GUI for anything other than a mobile/touch device is pretty high on the list, though maybe that's just me.
Considering all the nods to G1 in the original War For Cybertron, I've always considered it a G1 prequel, rather than set in the Prime universe, despite anything Hasbro says.
Comparing Faith No More to Limp Bizkit or Disturbed is like comparing a Blu Ray to a 7th generation copy on VHS.
I've had an arcade stick for pretty much every console I've had in the last 20 years, but I've never been happy with using them due to where I sit/what's available to sit them on/etc.
The Black and White buttons were great for Street Fighter III... As long as you had the Duke, that is. Admittedly, the positioning on the S was ridiculous.
Not officially, it isn't. Otherwise Atari Games would have had to have credited Data East in the game in some way, and that isn't the case. (In fact, I believe that's why the home conversions don't carry the Road Blaster name in the west, due to the prominence of the Atari/Tengen title by the time it was converted)
And the Heli from Road Blaster's follow-up, Cobra Command/Thunder Storm was at the start of Double Dragon II!
The MSX had a LaserDisc add on. This ran on it.
Completely different game. That's a conversion of an Atari arcade game with a similar name name.
See my post above for the "improved" version of this ad.
Remember folks: Boob Aprons = Slavery!
Anybody who's had a level 50 on SWOTOR for any significant amount of time will tell you that there's barely any endgame aside from playing through the same 2 raids week in, week out to get better gear.
Never liked the game, personally.
"How Harmonix are able to avoid these claims is completely black magic of some sort."
The Tramiels ran Atari Corp for 12 YEARS - They must have done *something* right.
Considering the Tramiels ran Atari Corp from 1984 - 1996, 12 years, that a pretty drawn-out implosion.
"The overwhelming number of players on Star Wars games is children who do not need to be forced as a captured audience to participate in homosexual content."
There's a pretty big hint that TMNT is inspired by Frank Miller's work right from the front cover of the first issue...
I put more stock in issues 4-7 of the original Mirage comic book, that *do* state the cannister was of alien origin.
While I'm at it, here is Peter Laird's original, unedited opinion on the Bay Turtles.