drmaddock
DRMaddock
drmaddock

I suppose I'm a bit twisted on the view. I don't care a nunce about physical media and vastly prefer physical media, so I was fine with the fact that the Xbox was going digital.

Like what? Not trying to rabblerouse, but I played both of them at E3 and I came away feeling that it was pretty much a beefier version of the same system with social features like sharing video and what not. I played with the new move and found it to be very lackluster, and while I like the color bar, I don't like

Surprised Demon Souls wasn't mentioned here.

OR, radical thought here, all of this takes place before Booker was drowned since by the time he gets to Rapture, it's already destroyed.

I dunno. When I saw it at E3 I out it was the coolest part of the game. Granted, they already had so many things unlocked, but I liked that you could trade the chip away and still have things unlocked. So if you have 5 and your friend has 5, there, that's 10 items unlocked. That, and it seems like they're slipping

The game The Raven: Legacy of a Master Thief is about a boring Swede who suddenly finds his life unboring.

I feel the same way. People laude the PS4 until the end of days because it's exactly like the PS3 (with new touch features and some social stuff), but when the Xbox One actually tried to shake things up, they sneer at it. I think when the redesigns come around, we're going to see a lot of new features added on to the

Aside from inflation, they're also considering the changes to the character. Like the Batcave going from a cave with a TV and some gadgets to a Cave that a helo can fly out of with unlimited amounts of tech.

The DualShock 4 is $60. And if the battery fails, you need to send it to Sony if it's been less than a year or buy a new one. Replacing the battery on your own voids the system warranty (but if you don't care about that, go for it).

There will probably be plenty of people who buy the game day 1 then get the new system two months later for X-mas and decide to upgrade their copy of the game.

I just have to say, I really, really disliked the PS4 controller. The material on the bottom just seemed to absorb the sweat of everyone who played it and it was just gross. That aside, I didn't like that you had to flip the controller to look at the color bar on top.

Splinter Cell Conviction was never on PS3, and Bioshock too a year to move over while Mass Effect took 5 years.

I dunno the exact specs, but I always thought the original kinect was a major flop and could barely track your motions. You'd hold your hand for five seconds and maybe it'd track it. But the new one seemed flawless. They had a display where it showed all the ways you were being tracked and I was floored. It could tell

I don't think they're doing sequels. They're just going to keep releasing the $40 playsets and "waves" of booster packs. So instead of being like Skylanders where it's a $500 refresh every Oct-Dec, you get $100 of content released every other month. They'll still keep earning the same amount of money, but it seems

Well Ruffian was Free Worlds first and they made Crackdown, one of my favorite games ever. Still, I don't really see them making anything new other than maybe Crackdown 3 (but 2 was pretty terrible).

You have no idea what kind of ecosystem Microsoft wanted. They weren't really talking about it. And, in case you forgot, Steam was terrible for years before it got amazing.

I used the new Kinect at E3 and I thought it was fantastic. It worked about 50x better than the old one.

343 Studios, Ruffian Games, Turn 10 Studios, and Lionhead Studios. Not to mention the fact that Microsoft is also wicked good at getting 3rd party devs to create games solely for them, or at the very least, with long timed exclusivity. See: Bioshock, Mass Effect, Splinter Cell: Conviction, Dead Rising. Though, for

Perry the Platypus is a confirmed character.