goodratt
Goodratt
goodratt

I’ve been playing Legends since release and still love it. If you haven’t checked it out yet, you absolutely should. As far as a multiplayer co-op game goes, it’s very respectful of the player’s time and polished extremely well.

Yup. My favorite way to play BB is to only level using the echoes you get from bosses (not counting chalice dungeons), and to approach them in ascending order of echo payout, which puts you at level 64 by the end (so, in the 60’s for the DLC, since echo-wise they come last). This makes all the bosses feel about level

Yeah, there weren’t any NPC summons there I don’t think—just player summons. Oh, and visceral attacks on Maria are *very* doable even for people who aren’t good at parrying—most of her attacks have larger-than-normal parry windows.

The article specifies whether they can or not.

And if those attacks were 3x longer strings, and she popped them out 3x faster, oh and if her second and third phases were an entirely separate healthbar, and if she got health back when she visceral attacked you.

It’s got guts! Huge guts! Rip and tear!

Yeah, I’m bummed that I’m probably missing out on some really rad worldbuilding, visual moments, and environments (my first trip into the deep underground, where you enter this massive cavern so large that the glowing bugs on its walls look like stars and it’s like a night sky overhead was AMAZING, and inspiring—it

I’ve played ‘em all. Bloodborne is my favorite game of all time (beaten it on SL4, multiple NG+7, half a dozen other times, still go tomb prospecting frequently), and while I didn’t like Sekiro as much (it was more narrow and wasn’t quite my bag; the rhythm sections were way too overtuned), I thought it made some

I finally gave up on the game—I just wasn’t having fun, the combat (which I never really liked very much) had lost its luster, the exploration grew to be a slog, the good bits were becoming fewer and further between, and then there was the whole final act that I kept hearing about being terribly overtuned and

Imagine if the parts all had functions, too, with mechanical benefits that you could tangibly see and feel. Your ship wears down over time, parts break, with low-quality stuff going out quickly and rarer, high-quality stuff lasting much longer. A part breaks and you’re stranded until you can make a replacement, and

That’s the vibe I get as well. Bummer that he (resultantly?) made himself such a continued, and sometimes even downright toxic, problem in the game sphere.

First of all, great name. I NEED the Legacy of Kain series to come back.

Huh. I *just* got fed up with and uninstalled Elden Ring and have been looking for something else to sink my teeth into. I enjoyed this game for a spell a few years back but then moved on to other things. I’ve been wanting to get back into it on the PS5, to see if the VR fares a little better. Sounds like a good

The dude’s always been a magician at heart, since jump street, and he’s *always* been a mess of a developer. I don’t doubt he does love games but the fact that he’s been the heart of *so many* nightmarish situations for Gearbox, as a lead, public figure, when he *didn’t need to be*, is what bums me out.

Honestly hearing Penn talk about him like he’s more magician than “his day job” makes me really happy for him, while also really annoyed that he’s still trying to be in games (and it makes it seem like he’s in games only because of the money it makes him).

Just hand over the reins, Rando, I’m sure they’ll still cut you

Teller did not say that, how could he?

Reminds me of that reporter that was heckling Buzz Aldrin about the moon landing being faked and calling him a liar and Buzz sprinkled the sidewalk with his teeth.

This has always been my thinking. If Loose Change proves 9/11 was an inside job, why is Loose Change still available? If the government is both willing to and capable of murdering its own people as part of any conspiracy, why isn’t every open-eyed believer—well. Dead?

That’s all conspiracy theories, I think. Obviously this one, due to the physicality of the thing, but like, the more people you meet and places you go, the more you see how interconnected we are, how similar, and how complex and beautiful the world is. If you live in the town you were born in and leave your state to

He made Neil Armstrong cry!