Ski Safari hipster edition?
Ski Safari hipster edition?
It has a lot of issues, but it IS pretty nice having insurnace for the first time in 10 years.
Ohhh, you have an eye injury? Sorry, pre-existing condition, you can't sign up.
Ooo, your cancer in 2001 was removed during the biopsy, with no signs of it coming back, and only cost your insure like $200 decades ago?…
*Affordable Care Act
The Dark Energy one is probably the worst offender on the list, if only because it was the entire setup and explanation of why the reapers were doing what they were doing. Instead of getting the stupid "lol organics and synthetics never get a long!" the reapers wiped out civilizations because the continued use of the…
I think you really came at me a bit too aggressively here, Arn. I wasn't saying anything except "I'd like to know why they toned the design down so heavily" and you're making all these points about expectation and age and nostalgia.
Sorry, bud, but to be honest, you're the only one coming off like an arrogant douche here
When a singleplayer game is so boring i want to rather continue playing a MMORPG game, than its really fucked up.
I would've loved Origins 2.0.
Man. All of this sounds so much better than the mashy, overly simplistic slog we got in the final product. Wonder what changed that made them dial down their aspirations so much while keeping the scale ridiculously huge.
Right. Fuck it. I'm just going to stop playing this game then.
Played all the way up to when you unlock your own castle and then couldn't play because you need "power" to continue the story and the only way to get power was doing the boring side quests. Also I stopped because all I ever found was warrior gear which was super odd as I was a rogue. It's a shame because I was super…
I didn't even finish it the first time through, myself.
Bah~ though this is just a clip I nominate this entire climax
Looking at this design reminds me of how much I despise the "soldier" redesign from Aliens.
how can u not be burnt out when all games do the same fucking thing?
Grabbing quests, hearing randos sputter out their sob stories, calling my omnipresent horse from the ether cloud horse realm in which it assuredly resided—it was a familiar rhythm born of other open-world-ish RPGs like Skyrim and Dragon Age. Each step felt like second nature, for better or worse.
Fair question I guess, but as a Fallout fan it's stuff like lore that keeps me returning to the game and playing it. I dunno. It's hard to put a "reason" to why anyone should write about anything in general, but I think part of it is just that fans of the series are waiting so faithfully for the next installment…
So this seems to be a copy paste of somebody else's article with no link to the original article but plenty of links to other Kotaku pieces. The only connection to the original author is a Twitter handle link, of all things.
It's not fan service though...Tolkine wrote those instances himself...just later on. Adherence to the source material is all well and good, had Tolkien explained those events and disappearances in the main book. He didn't....but they were explained by him later in the LOTR appendices. So even he, in hindsight, thought…
NO person who calls themselves a Tolkien fan is going to excise the Dol Guldur scenes, or references through those scenes to the first dark lord Morgoth, Ungoliant, or Goldolin ect.