
"Are you ready to have some fun? " asks Paula Deen, as the rest of the world slowly backs away.
"Are you ready to have some fun? " asks Paula Deen, as the rest of the world slowly backs away.
That's #5
Freddy vs. Jason was way better than it had any right to be, and I'm still disappointed we never got Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash.
Great advice, I will easily admit that it is a very intriguing game and still fun even though I had no idea what was going on most of the time. I did enjoy the ship combat and once I figured out I could just load my last save after I died that made it much easier (less punishing?). I just don't have time for a game…
I love games with random generation. Yeah, a lot of them can be of mixed quality, but you have some gems like Spelunky that turn the tables on you without disrupting the consistency of the gameplay. If a 3D game with heavy emphasis on action can pull this off, then all the better. I think random generation, if done…
I just texted a picture of duck boobs to a friend today.
look at this and tell me he shouldnt be drawing this book instead.
Heh. I'm a little more free-flowing with my stars. If I laugh, that's a star. I agree with something... star. I disagree but like the points... star. But no stars for name-calling, even if there's good points.
Daily reminder of how the gaming (and especially modding) community can be pretty goddamn awesome sometimes.
That's a nice story.
Ha! EVERYONE has that problem, myself included.
I feel your pain. I dropped Final Fantasy XIII for the same reason. I came up against a ridiculously difficult boss called Hecatoncheir. I don't know how many times I tried to beat that thing, but I finally decided it wasn't worth the high blood pressure and that I wasn't all that into the game anyway. I traded it in.
Agreed. I appreciate both old and new JRPGs. But, frankly, when it comes to trying a JRPG with which I have no prior experience, it's a hell of a lot easier to get into a newer one.
As someone who has liked most modern JRPG and tough love the old ones, finds them all a bit slow and tedious, I think this encompass pretty well what I think is going on here:
I found myself not caring at all about these robotic line delivery units called characters. Their relationships felt overly scripted and, in a beautiful world, they felt out of place. The sentiment of their struggles was fine in a textbook sense, but nothing more than that.
JRPGs weren't exactly popular in the west during the NES years, but the ones that came here I liked. The Super Nintendo had some great JRPGs.