Both Paul brothers are pieces of shit.
Both Paul brothers are pieces of shit.
Man, I loved this game. The quirky sprites, the first person dungeon, and (of course) the music. Reading this article, I had both the Storybook Theme and the Labrynth Proper running through my head. Classic.
4 and 6 are ‘fucking incredible’ and the top two in the series. Gameplay and storywise 7 doesn’t hold a candle to the SNES masterpieces. As I’ve stated elsewhere, 7 is in an odd place as an early 3D RPG and no, it doesn’t hold up graphically, but for many it was their first FF, if not their first RPG altogether, and…
No. No spite at all, but compared to the earlier FF games (IV and VI), it’s very subpar gameplay/storywise and compared to the later 3D FF games (IX and X) it doesn’t hold up that well graphically and otherwise. For many, it was their first FF game, if not their first RPG, and it holds a special place in their hearts.…
True, but those animated spells/abilities got pretty damned old. And no airship. Other than that, I agree with you.
The correct answer is 6. Bonus points for omitting 7.
Grandia II is extremely underrated. It still no Skies of Arcadia, but it’s still borderline amazing.
For a long time, mine was Phantasy Star IV. I got the game for a Christmas, and for many, many years after I didn’t feel like the Holidays unless I was a new run. I didn’t hurt that it had one of the best title screen songs of all time. OF ALL TIME!
I actually ‘beat’ Risk of Rain.
It’s just so unfulfilling and doesn’t make a whole lot of sense- neither gameplay nor narrative wise. I won’t spoil anything, but I just felt like it was leading to somewhere or something that never happened.
I love, love, loved Origins.
Yay! Politics!
Wow. Lol. Past the edit window. My shame is now eternal.
Zasalamel or GTFO. I got really, really, really good at SC4.
Silence your phone, Dickweed.
Nah. PlayStation is nothing but a paperweight to me and I actually enjoy playing games on the Switch. It’s CRAZY, right?
You’ll probably go back to making wild assumptions about people you don’t know. Because, you know, it’s not like this is the internet where anonymity breeds bravery or anything.
Financially it was a fucking boon, but for the people that actually play games it left a bad taste in the mouths of many. It made them money, and I’m disputing that, but they cashed in a lot of their good will with the Wii and they had nothing left for the WiiU. The Wii will be remembered as a system that sold a…
Yes, but the Wii showed where Nintendo truly struggled: third party games. While the system sold extremely well, I think you’ll be hard pressed to find many ‘gamers’ who remember it fondly. Everyone ‘had to have it’ but nobody ever really played it. The bad taste of the Wii was only further exasperated by the…
But it wasn’t one console, though. The Wii died and extremely unceremonious death. Everyone had one, but nobody bought any games for it - they all just Wii Sportsed. After the Wii just stopped, the WiiU never even got off the ground. Based on everything I saw on the Switch in the early days, I expected it to finish…