franckv
franckv
franckv

Oh boy, we’ve opened Pandora’s box... I feel sorry for going off-topic, but hey, we have no private message system on Kotaku, right? And I’m too lazy to start a blog here (or anywhere!). So, first of all, thanks for the Scandinavian recommendations, be sure that I’ll have a listen soon. Funny thing is that The

Right, confession time. When it comes to music, I’m a snobbish bastard, addicted to (somewhat) obscure indie pop-rock bands from the UK, or outright unknown French electronica acts... And then, I have some sympathy for some KPop tunes too, including Tiara, 2ne1, Kara, or even Koyote. Girls Generation? OK, as long as

Thank you for being so nice, when it might have been the right moment for being a Dick!

Kpop vs. Skyrim? Your comment is full of win, well worthy of an enamel chewing gum, if you ask me.

Android™ dreams of electric puppies...

Yes. The soundtrack. No wonder why Austin Wintory got nominated for the Grammy awards, really.

Agreed. Agreed with everything you wrote.

It is. ;)

No. Simple as that: no. Too bad for 99% of your entire gaming community, then. And I’m not even joking.

(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻

And on the Vita too (as far as Flow and Flower are concerned)!

Indeed. At least in Europe, as mentioned on the UK PSN blog:

Nope. It’s cross-buy.

They’re the same, really, but the crisper screen of the Vita helped me choose what version I should play.

Don’t worry, it was just a way of putting the weight of the ZE3 announcement into perspective, compared to what is commonly considered major releases (mainly in the crowd that has some interest in Japanese games, though not exclusively). It was not meant as a game mechanics comparison, sorry if I gave the wrong

Oh, now I feel like a test subject...

Considering that you like the Persona series, I’d say that you could take pleasure in playing a Visual Novel, since that’s the genre of the Zero Escape series (on’t let the wording turn you down, these are truly games!).

Do yourself a favour, play the games in order. Some characters make a comeback, and the story is meant to satisfy with the knowledge of previous events.