World of Tanks did the same, they added a battle royale mode about a week ago. Just a bit late to the party.
World of Tanks did the same, they added a battle royale mode about a week ago. Just a bit late to the party.
Hey, every video game is worth saving and preserving as part of the history of the industry.
I’d just go to an event and sign every single card people put in front of me, make it so the signature is so common it’s practically worthless to add them to any card to resell.
I’ve been waiting for a Pokemon-like game, but one for older audiences like me. I’m not sure if it was the repetitive formula, or if I really just outgrew the cutesy appeal of Pokemon games, but I just stopped playing those many years ago.
Revengeance is a hilarious breath of fresh air in the ever-serious Metal Gear franchise
Kotaku (emphasis mine):
The development cost was around $85 million, and I think EA kicked in $40 million for marketing and distribution.
How different is the remake from the original? Because if it’s just cosmetic changes to the story, then we’re talking about a 20 year old story (give or take), so it’s not like much can be spoiled that hasn’t already been spoiled by years of it being part of popular gaming culture.
My bad.
I wish we could see a recording of her, reading for the first time the script for the chapter when Ash finally won the championship. If we were all happy, I can’t imagine what it was like for her.
My point regarding this being a blog is that they are working as bloggers, and everything they post in here is considered opinion pieces (even if the format does resemble news articles), so there is no need for or expectation of journalistic integrity behind all of it.
Couple of things about that:
Do people even play this game? I mean, from reading the news about it, it’s nothing but a hellscape of greed, controlled by resellers and scalpers fighting for dominance over an artificially scarce commodity.
“Maybe if we add some NFTs, kids love NFTs, right?”
Can’t quite remember when that was, probably early 2000's, so I must have been 17 or 18.
I have not, but according to Wikipedia:
Interstate ‘76
Corporations and their long held pipe dream of infinite growth. You can’t just make a ton of money, you need to make a ton of money on top of the ton you were making last fiscal year.