8 hours of fun for $3, while a game like Dishonored was 8 hours (pushing it) for $60. Seems like you got a good deal.
8 hours of fun for $3, while a game like Dishonored was 8 hours (pushing it) for $60. Seems like you got a good deal.
The tutorial, by its nature, is simplistic and easy. It gets tougher very quickly, and as stated in the article, there are funky mechanics for every map. For example, in one map you have to kill a certain number of towers, and you have to do it quietly while staying out of view of other towers using buildings, so as…
I'd agree with you there. A high end PC can barely run a PS2 emulator properly. I doubt the Ouya will be able to, but I think it could do a PS1 emulator with ease.
Most people didn't complain about the original ending because they felt it didn't fit. They complained that they didn't get what they were promised, and that the plot holes were a mile wide.
Overclocking should be a bit more stable now, too. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if people quickly came up with custom cases with custom cooling solutions for the Ouya board.
It's running a Tegra3 clocked to either 1.6GHz or 2GHz. Considering a Tegra3 is clocked at 1.2GHz and runs a 1280x800 resolution screen quite fine, I hardly see the Ouya having issues running a 1080p TV screen.
Ooo-yah.
Either he's an idiot, or he's (badly) trying to imply that all Android games are just rehashed iOS games.
Yeah, because everyone has the same size hands.
Yeah. Bubble UPnP connected to my Plex Media Server running on my main desktop, and I can watch anything on Plex via the Ouya on my main TV as well.
The Droid 4 has a dual core TI OMAP processor running at 1.2GHz. The Ouya has a Tegra3 quad core running at a higher base clock setting (1.6 or 2 GHz), and the Tegra 3 has much better graphics handling capability than a dual core TI OMAP. Yeah, the Ouya is much more powerful than the Droid 4.
You act as if big corporations can just bring a lawsuit against anyone regardless of if there is any actual basis for it or not, and that they will against Ouya because they're afraid of a non-portable box designed to play portable games.
Why would people want their money back if they got the product they paid for in the first place? The only kickstarters having issues with money are those that promised, met funding, and failed to deliver.
That still doesn't address WoW PvP. Sure you can rotate the camera, but your perspective is locked to your character. Besides, I played the D3 PvP, and it worked fine. The arenas were sized in such a way that it was difficult to "hide" from your enemies. The purpose was to fight, and the maps were tuned in such a way…
I haven't played it since the end of WotLK, but it was amazingly fun, with no really overpowered combos (I did 5v5), and my friends and I had a blast playing oddball combinations.
Frankly I question whether or not PvP can work at all in a top-down perspective game like this.
It was actually a lot of fun. I played the PvP, and after listening to many people's expectations, the PvP I played would have met them all after some tweaking. It was a little unbalanced, but not horridly so, and definitely not something that would take years to balance (I played D3 PvP at Blizzcon 2010).
The way it was when I played it (Blizzcon 2010), each character had a standard set of gear, and you had a few minutes before the game started to set your abilities how you wanted. Then, you enter the game and start the killing. It was actually quite fun, and my friends and I had a blast playing it. I really wonder why…
All the D3 design decisions make complete sense if you look at it from the perspective of driving as much traffic through the RMAH as possible, and that was what killed the game. They clearly tried too hard to make money off of the RMAH, and they made bad game decisions because of it. The utter scarcity of good loot…
Off topic, but my little brother actually made several hundred dollars worth of real money out of selling his gear. He started by grinding bosses, then he'd make patterned items and sell them, then he'd buy items for low amounts of gold from the gold AH and list them on the RMAH for lots of money. At last count, he'd…