Makes sense, because violent people would by no means be interested in violent video games. These people simply do not exist. They can't exist, so they must be created by these strange new things called video games.
Makes sense, because violent people would by no means be interested in violent video games. These people simply do not exist. They can't exist, so they must be created by these strange new things called video games.
From a developer standpoint there is something that can alter the way achievements are handled. If a developer has access to the total number of people that have gained an achievement in respect to the total number of players, they can use this information to gauge where players are spending their time and/or money…
My family never purchased any gaming console. We had a PC eventually and I played some DOS games on it, most notably Rampage and Budo. I later saved up a bunch of money and bought myself an Atari Lynx, which was the first dedicated gaming device I'd ever owned (so maybe my origins are more handheld than anything else)
Did borderlands 2 work? That's one of the reasons I went back to Windows 7 from the release preview.
Apple products tend to be really high quality though. They last a long time. They catch you with the iOS updates. Every new iOS adds features upon features upon features, making old hardware unbearably slow after only 2 iterations. It eventually burns people out on their old device, even though it would have performed…
And only about half of those (probably being optimistic) are capable gaming devices.
Even though he read it wrong, his statement is not entirely incoherent with how things tend to happen in the world :( Which is a sad thing.
Kind of funny since the guy is in fact a criminal. If he'd left that term out it would have made more sense.
Ahaha, that's my first time seeing this in text... nice... *copy*
Kind of sounds like parts of Ultima Online, heh...
And the scribblenauts version is a right-handed link, in concurrence with the Wii versions of link, if I remember correctly.
Definitely need to see this then, heh.
The Sly version. He doesn't read any comics, but he's a big stallone fan. Even though I think he'd like the movie, his initial response to the movie was negative (however unfounded it may be)
Haven't seen it yet, but my friend doesn't want to see it because he expects it to ruin his memory of the original. My guess is a lot of people feel that way.
This seems like an interesting source of information: http://www.gamers.org/docs/FAQ/doomfaq/
The Guardian's review notes it: " but the mail-order version also adds a plasma rifle and a BFG9000".
First of all, there's the joy of actually finding and recognizing the easter egg. A lot of people don't find the not so obvious ones, and when they do a lot of them don't even know what it's about. So in a sense it makes you feel good for being familiar (and probably loving) something, and it's the same something that…
And you got a specific bonus for mail-ordering it.
That caught my eye as well. That's exactly the kind of thing a company coming to us to make them a game would think, and it's exactly the kind of idea we'd shoot out of the water. "A game in which you can try to form alliances with demons from hell". Sounds like fun!