drmaddock
DRMaddock
drmaddock

I’m finally about to get around to playing DA:I (What? Don’t look at me like that. Witcher 3 took hundreds and hundreds of hours). Is there another DLC coming that I should wait for first? And can these be played as part of the natural game progression?

Okay, first a bit of background: I studied media communication and impacts in graduate school through my Master’s and a bit of my PhD before dropping out. I focused pretty heavily in gaming aggression and language development (cultural language growth in MMOs, whether or not kids pick up bad words via negative online

Somewhat ironically, desensitization is something that many media researchers contest existing at all, especially when compared to aggression.

I dunno if we’ll see Iorveth. Maybe in a side quest, but you have to make a lot of decisions for him to live. If you chose Roche, he and Saskia die. If you choose to save Triss, he and Saskia die. It’s a very narrow branch to let him live.

Man, I just couldn’t get into Bloodborne. I loved Dark Souls, but BB just felt too dark and tiresome for me. I think the lack of a distinct lore was what killed it for me.

While this is my favorite game of all time (I played it through, once, for 240 hours), and I loved the ending, I felt supremely betrayed by the romance plot. I played Witcher 1 and 2, and I enjoyed Triss as a character, so I went about romancing her as she was the girl who Geralt romance in the first two games. But as

As others have said, but to clarify a bit more, this picture isn’t from any point in the game, but actually from a DLC. It in no way relates to or spoils the ending.

As a teacher of high school students, I’ve heard it used as both. Some students say “She’s my bae,” and others say “Korra is bae.” Considering that it’s an acronym for “before anything else”, the latter is more proper, but with these kinds of colloquialisms, I hardly think it matters.

What I want to know is if I can stream my XBO at home to my laptop at work...

Hmm... I dunno. The guy who made RE2 already gave us something new, and that was... The Evil Within. Maybe we’re better off with what we’re comfortable with.

Any idea on the pricing? Am I going to have to buy two $40 carts to experience the game? Also, if I get one and my wife gets one, do we still have to pay extra for Invisible Kingdom?

I’ll remain cautious. I loved the first one, but the second one was a train wreck. Even if this one has full destructibility that works like a charm, if it’s as empty and devoid of character as the second one, it’ll still be a failure in my eyes.

I actually thought the tombs were a bit out of place in the first game. The game was about her coming to love the idea of raiding tombs, of learning the true story behind the myths instead of just reading about them, and the main game supported that idea as it actually ends with her literally raiding a tomb. That was

Hmm, I dunno. AWS would probably be pretty costly (considering there putting a load of tens of millions of people onto their servers), and PSN is already operating at a pretty bare-bones cost. SONY is still on pretty dire straits. They announced that their more profitable last year than they expected, only losing 170

Completely aside, I had that issue for a long time. I couldn’t access parts of the interface, and then after an hour or so, I’d get disconnected. Turned out my router and my modem were both providing an NAT, so all I had to do was click through some windows to turn off the NAT on my modem. Works like a charm now.

They answered those questions in the article. Single player has very limited destructibility. Only online MP has 100% destruction. They are all in the same game environment, though.

The main city in Radiata Stories has to be my favorite. It’s completely alive, and you get to know nearly every person in the city over time. There are tons of parts to it, multiple guilds, a fully explorable castle... I wish every JRPG took their cues from that game.

I would argue that Halo 3’s theater mode and level builder have been replicated in many, many ways, and not entirely all in gaming.

Well, I’ll do their work for them. Time balls explode because they vastly alter the time makeup of where they hit, causing the area inside to age billions of years instantaneously, causing the elements inside the ball to break down, react with each other, and then explode. Like a mini-big bang.