dsnake1
Dsnake1
dsnake1

But that's not a full review. It doesn't include raids or any of the content coming in the next two months.

My buddies and I spend quite a bit of time there. There's soccer balls and a big black balloon ball. Those paired with dancing makes it an awesome place to chill after a particularly hard strike or when we're waiting for a friend to come online. That being said, I do think the option would be sweet.

It's not released yet.

You don't wear a helmet when you're St the Tower. Wouldn't it be silly to not wear a helmet anywhere else in the game though? Everywhere else is dangerous.

If you get a PS4 before January and buy the game on PS3 through digital download from the PS Store, you get a free upgrade to the PS4 version if you want.

I feel there should be a little bit of responsibility on the consumer to do a bit of research. There was an alpha and a beta which allowed players to try the game well before committing to the purchase. There is a ton of gameplay video up over at YouTube and multiple preliminary reviews on many of the gaming websites

Eh, it's just the final push to get as many people to A) Preorder the game or B) Buy the game as early as possible as to drive rev before the price drops and/or people have the opportunity to buy used copies.

You would, but that's like saying you don't want to watch any movie on your TV at home because you would enjoy it more in the theater or on a 79" 4K TV.

My guess is the Google Earth-like Planet Viewer. Pretty cool and worth a few minutes of checking it out.

From what I understand, a PC port could be seen as early as late Q1, or more likely, somewhere in Q2 of 2015. I mean, I've heard rumors of Holiday 2015, but there's no reason to wait that long. I expect a slow PC month to suddenly get upgraded to the Destiny PC port month, but we'll see. The only obstacle I see in the

Patches and updates do happen in other sports. They are just called "rule changes", "equipment changes", and "upgraded technology" .

if you read the article, it says guest speakers will cover topics like gaming history, game graphics, online gaming, and marketing. Otherwise the class is basically a gaming industry class.

That and without a note from the devs saying, "We quit"/"We won't be finishing this game" there isn't a clean cut way to tell when a game has been abandoned. Should Valve really cut sales on a game that has been silent for month? Even two? What if the dev had some sort of personal emergency and he couldn't make an

It was definitely advertised as unfinished, but I still like it. Sure, it can get slow, but it's really fun with a group of three or four friends, leveling up together, catching dinosaurs to ride, and either killing new players that venture on the server, taking them prisoner, or taking them into the fold, playing

Nintendo just needs to add an item customization option like they have in Smash. That way, people who want the "vanilla" experience can turn items off, people who want only the non-game-breaking items can have them, and people who want the wonky, if not unfair, skew of equalizers can still yell at their friends for

That's very true. A large part of that is how the Wii U was released and marketed. When it originally came out, not many people knew if it was just an add-on for the wildly successful Wii, a new console, or something different. When people learned it would be a new and expensive box that would do almost the exact

To me, Nintendo games are just that. They are often much-loved, if not overused, IPs that don't offer a whole lot new besides a new location (maybe), possibly a new character or two, but the same basic concept and the same style of gameplay. It's one of those things that either you love it or you hate it. I do have to

Well, it is a lower priced console, which many people consider an "other" console. Basically, most people buy the Wii U because it plays games no other system can play. Legend of Zelda, Super Smash Bros, Pikmin, Donkey Kong, Mario Everything, Monster Hunter, Metroid, and Bayonetta are all franchises that are (mostly)

one reason for early access is to help fund a developer through the development process. If a single person or team of three guys work on a game for 2 years, they need money during that time. Early access allows devs to support a family while developing a game full time.

Backlog time. Well, the ever expanding backlog that just grew way too much over the summer sale. So I'm trying to whittle down the new-to-me games like Papers, Please and Wolfenstein: The New Order.