avclub-29539ed932d32f1c56324cded92c07c2--disqus
GeoX
avclub-29539ed932d32f1c56324cded92c07c2--disqus

Yeah, the Ace Attorney games DO tend to blend together a bit, but I find it's easy to at least keep straight the main thrust of each game by remembering which game has which main prosecutor: Edgeworth, Von Karma, Godot. The other two games are different enough that it's not too hard to remember them.

I'd probably peg 2 as my favorite also. I was very invested in the mystery of Edgeworth, and even though I felt the last case was a bit too drawn-out, the part where (keeping things vague and spoiler-less) the villain of the piece suddenly reveals his true colors was definitely one of the most "holy shit" moments

Well, the US version of the Dragon Quest VI remake is due out next month.

Loving this game so far.
It's an honest-to-god original concept well-executed, and it's just so gosh-darn stylish-looking and well-animated. I was pretty well burnt out on Ace Attorney games by the end of Apollo Justice, so I appreciate the creators branching out into something new.

So it's not a prequel to Thirteen?
Never mind, then.

Burn!

How my hair look, Mike?

Someone has to say it.
This looks funnier than any latter-day Simpsons episode.

Collectively, the games on this list received four C's, seven B's, and two A's. I don't know where this C-heavy perception is coming from.

A distinct minority of them got C's. You dummersumthin?

Glad there are a lot of browser games here.
Those are my favorite, 'cause they're free and I don't have an iphone. Keep up the good work!

Whoa—Phil's on the AVclub?
Never seen this show, but whatever—that should make this place one thousand times awesomer.

That there comment should've been for the previous episode.

Cole was listening to Glenn Beck in the truck.
Logical choice for torture-rape-murder guy, I must say.

Like Watts, the Dwarf smith in Secret of Mana!

"Happy Holidays?!?"
NOOOOO! DAMN YOU, WAR ON CHRISTMAS!!! DAMN YOU TO HELL!!!!!!!!!!

Concur.

For the record, the OP's post is the ending to one of the only things I've read by Stephen King, a story where a dude is stuck on a desert island and ends up resorting to self-cannibalism.

Is it just me…
…or does it feel as though at this point they're making these movies out of a grim sense of obligation than anything else? Like, at first they were all enthusiastic in an "oh boy, it'll be just like Lord of the Rings!" kind of way, but then they started getting mediocre reviews and realized, huh—we're

I appreciate Breaking Bad on a much deeper level than you do.