Wizminkey
Wizminkey
Wizminkey

My main issue is the inability to open my journal or map and just pick the closest quest. I have to read the description of every quest just to get an idea of where it might be, or constantly select a quest, flip to the map to check distance, flip back, change quest, etc.

I’m having some trouble following The Witcher 3’s story because the quests feel like they should’ve been done in a certain order for the story to follow. One second I Geralt telling someone he has no idea where Ciri is, when thirty seconds earlier he was just talking about how she was in *PLACENAME*.

I’m surprised this game suffers from what I consider to be an RPG’s worst mistake; a giant map with hundreds of quests, but you can only see where one is at a time.

So it proves that the developer didn’t play the retail edition on a Steam account. It’s not like Steam is tied into his development environment, and any time he tests the game it’s tracking his achievement progress.

It’s not always about scams. Sometimes fledgling developers want to launch a dream and need financial support to take it to the next level. Sometimes that level is presentation of a prototype to publishers. Sometimes it’s finishing the project solo, or with a small team of 2-5.

I have 2 hours “played” of GTA IV’s Episodes just trying different command line arguments and settings to get it to work above 2FPS on a quad-core 2ghz system with a GTX 560 Ti. I understand the limit is there to protect the devs from “play my fill then sell it off” buyers.

I said “maybe four hours”, implying that’s the upper limit, and in the rare cases I do get that much time it’s on a weekend when I’ve taken care of at-home stuff during the day instead of having to do it after work.

I’d like to play as his father, known for his Venusian Aikido fighting style.

Yes, but anything downloaded through the Windows 8 Store is saved in a record you can view in Windows 10 to quickly download all your “Owned” apps (even free ones show up here.)

I don’t play their games often, but it was one video ad for every... I don’t know, maybe 30-60 minutes of gameplay. I’d rather that than a generic popup image ad after every level, or a banner always on the screen like many free games.

I was always frustrated with the PS3’s handling of save data. Especially so when my original one Yellow Light-ed on me. I managed to pull all the data off the drive via a PC, but had zero luck decrypting it whatsoever, even turning to PS3 modding forums for advice on how to get my legit data off my legit PS3 that had

On the one hand, same-system multiplayer introduces a new layer of potential bugs and performance issues. But on the other, games like Gears of War, Halo, Rock Band and Mario Party gained longevity because they were whipped out when friends came over, at parties or family gatherings.

Yes! I sank so many quarters into that game. It was like Pac-man on steroids to my 12-year-old mind. That machine sat in that spot for many years, until the arcade closed in later years.

I always figured “creepypasta” was a general term for that stuff people write like this:

While I was in my tweens/teens, my dad had a mild gambling problem. I spent a lot of time at Woodbine, the local horse racetrack, and I’d help him pick some horses for small $2 fun bets here and there, but where most of the money he gave me went was for rolls of quarters at the big arcade they had there.

I got tired of having to build and maintain a tower of rapidly obsolescing components. I built a desktop 5 years back for $700 with no GPU, which I bought later (GTX 560 Ti). Then I tried to run GTA IV. It didn’t run so much as crawl. How was it that my now-$1000 PC couldn’t run an old game on minimum graphics, but

Well, duh, they both use DirectX so... uh... easy!

Okay, so which Xbox 360 resources (CPU, RAM, etc) are going to be set aside to enable this streaming? How many 360 games leave enough resources open to a streaming service?

Take off the tinfoil hat. If you register for it, you get Windows 10 free for life, as long as you have a legit Windows 7 or 8 key/installation. The end.

Does nobody use the Wireless Display app, then? Because it lets you do precisely this. I mean, you still need to be at your computer, or at least close to it with wireless peripherals. But, it’s pretty damn close and it works with any device capable of simulcasting. I’ve broadcast my PC and phone to the Xbox with it.