Right? God forbid we play a game for the enjoyment of playing a game. We might accidentally derive pleasure from something that wasn’t a chime and a value-less digital “reward”.
Right? God forbid we play a game for the enjoyment of playing a game. We might accidentally derive pleasure from something that wasn’t a chime and a value-less digital “reward”.
Exactly this, I spent more time just playing the game and not caring about the battle pass or unlocks.
Breath of tyre, surely?
Yeah, it’s wild that in a game whose structure begets a whole bunch of branching scenarios, there are only two that actually progress the story: drugging your wife and torturing the “cop,” or convincing your wife that you’re in a time loop. Everything else is superfluous. And then even THAT is made irrelevant by the…
The PS3 version shared trophies with the PS4 version, so they’re still accessible. But the PS5 version has a new trophy set.
I could see that either working with the rest of the game (if the permanence of death and loss and the inability to bring people back fit with major themes) or being just unnecessarily trollish (if it just comes out of nowhere thematically). I haven’t played that game, so I’d have nothing better than a random guess…
Definitely the Xbox One. Luke’s article from the other day captured my feelings perfectly: the Xbox One was completely pointless. I think I bought like three games for it, and ended up using it for maybe 10 hours total. It wasn’t that it was “bad”, just that basically any Xbox exclusive game that interested me worked…
An estimated 33,000 Japanese Americans served in the U.S. military during World War II, of which 20,000 joined the Army. The 100th/442nd Infantry Regiment became the most decorated unit in U.S. military history.
D:OS 1, at least, predates the release of D&D 5th Edition by a couple of months, and was in development for a few years before that, so I don’t think it was 5th Edition specifically they were inspired by (well, they couldn’t). D&D-style combat, kind of, but D:OS1 was far more heavily invested in environmental effects…
So the timeframe in the Bobbins Universe is basically: