Skyrim nothing. Morrowind had the greatest videogame map of all time. And the thing is, it was a physical map that came packaged with the game.
Skyrim nothing. Morrowind had the greatest videogame map of all time. And the thing is, it was a physical map that came packaged with the game.
Good thing it’s not an audio tour.
Eh... “Too many enemies on screen” is way more close to Serious Sam than Doom. As a matter of fact, Doom: Plutonia, which had waves upon waves of monsters, was terribly received.
It’s a question of what works.
Three minutes is actually about how long you can be exposed to the vacuum of space without sustaining any serious damage. Unfortunately, only about 10 seconds of those 3 minutes are spent conscious.
lose information at a rate of petabytes.
I disagree on phablet. That terms needs to stay. Phablet is clearly a derogatory term and the longer we use it and the more we mock those technical cop-outs otherwise known as giant phones the better. Giant phones need to die a horrible death. The only reason phones have gotten absurdly huge is because it is easier to…
No.
The Internet of Things - before it even gets going..
If only titanium were cheaper/easier. Lightness of aluminum, strength of steel, very abundant on Earth. And a bitch to machine/form/weld!
David Wise and Grant Kirkhope?
my God consider me sold
I thought the 3rd person switches were weird too. Like cover mechanics work in Killzone and stuff, and first person sneaking worked out fine in Dishonored (maybe Thief? didn’t play it), so the first I played Deus Ex : HR, and the game just suddenly switched to 3rd person when i went into cover, I was like :/.
Everyone has that one game they still remember playing for the first time. For me, it was Deus Ex: Human Revolution.…
1) They only profit 25%
2) Because of 1 mod prices will probably be very high to make any actual profit
3) If they come up with a good idea someone can steal it, republish it and benefit from it
4) For every 1 good mod you’ll find dozens of crappy horse armor mods just looking to make a quick buck.
5) Company with a giant…
“our main goals were to allow mod makers the opportunity to work on their mods full time if they wanted to”
Still, I wish gamers could collectively pull together on say, microtransactions and freemium leaking oozing into every faucet of the gaming industry.
The ironic thing about that picture is, you can disassemble the cube with that screwdriver and pop it back together with your bare hands in like two minutes.
Rotate the top 1/8 of a turn (so it’s at a 45º angle to the other sides), then stick the flathead under the center block and pop it loose. The rest of the blocks…
So you didn’t see any black ops going on? Hmmm I wonder why?
Doesn’t have to be the case. It could just as easily result in people making utter crap and let money roll in. In fact, by adding monetary incentive, it might just push passion out the window, and we get the next Steam Greenlight: shovelware after shovelware of mysteriously up-voted bad games/mods that wind up being…
I wouldn’t pay for any mod I’ve ever installed. The guy who thinks he could make a million because his mods are heavily downloaded apparently has no idea how hard it is to convince people to pay for something when it goes from free to paid.