I have to agree, it really makes things harder since Kotaku started forcing us to read all the articles. If only they'd let us read the articles we'd want we wouldn't have that problem.
I have to agree, it really makes things harder since Kotaku started forcing us to read all the articles. If only they'd let us read the articles we'd want we wouldn't have that problem.
You're a bit angry over something so insignificant Irishman. Take a beer, you'll feel better after.
Frankly, I'd have an uneasy feeling betting on something that a game made by EA predicted.
There's actually a good reason. Did you know that this loophole is under article 3 of the Chinese law of importation of foreign goods?
In Asia, Tencent Inc., China's largest Internet value-added services company, best known for its QQ Instant Messaging client will be in charge of the distribution to Tencent's growing 300 million Internet user base through its leading QQ Game portal. The deal is one of only a handful of partnerships to bring a…
Why not? There's more than just the US in this world. You know, there's countries that are mainly PC gamers and have over a billion people.
God, that's horrible news, if it continues like that Nintendo will go broke and have to develop games for the iPad.
Unfortunately I don't have the time right now :/. Maybe later.
No, I don't actually. You need skill to paint and when you copy it, it will never be the same. On the other hand a cart is juts a chip with the exact same data recopied on it.
It doesn't change the fact that it's just the same chip but with other software on it. ROM's are not fabricated with software already burned in you know, you have to flash them before you sell the cartridge· Get a new ROM, flash same software on it and voilà!
Well, to be fair, they weren't into video games yet :P
Yes but if all cartridges are the same and it's only software that changes, can you really call it rare? It's like calling a USB stick rare because there's rare software on it.
Next time around they need to take a hard look at the console market and make better decisions.
I fail to see how putting old NES games on mobile phones will make them a lot of profit. There are so many emulators and clones out there and they could only charge nearly nothing for the game. And once people played all NES games, then what? Should they start developing just for mobile and give up their most…
Guess why so many big blockbuster games are just linear and have one path?
Reminds me of this song:
What genre?