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I’m actually curious about that as well. I imagine mods might break in multiplayer but maybe they’ll work if you play it offline in single player? I never mod my Bethesda games but I know a huge chunk of the player base does so maybe if things don’t work in multi, single player will still support them.

To be fair Mario Odyssey was amazing and Nintendo’s been doing really good lately.

This is actually surprising news to me. I’m not against it, I hate exclusives, the idea of more people having the ability to play Nier makes me happy. I guess I just feel that weird Japanese games aren’t really Xbox’s thing.

Maybe because Xbox has never sold well in Japan, but for years now I’ve been buying Sony’s

I have a friend who drives me insane.

He never gives anything he watches his full attention because a part of him runs his brain in detective mode while he watches stuff (or reads stuff or plays a game). I think what he wants is to figure out what happens before it happens and for his predictions to be at least

I’m so conflicted. I just want a remake of the PSP version that I can play on my Vita. A sequel could be cool, but please don’t give me another Silmeria. The way that game handled it’s Einherjar felt so soulless.

Awful block was definitely a standout this year.

The Bloodborne run was surprisingly entertaining as well. I’ve never seen a crowd get so hyped for ladders.

Super Metroid is pretty unforgiving. If it wasn’t a race, maybe they’d take a safety save, but it is what it is. I’d imagine that the decision to not run it could be down to a lot of things. Variety, lack of willing/available runners, allowing other incentives to get more of the donation money, but the whole thing

I don’t know what to expect out of the upcoming third game, but it still blows my mind that nobody was going to sign on for a sequel. I’m so glad Nintendo kept this series alive.

I can get why people who didn’t own a Wii U didn’t want to buy one just for Bayonetta, but all three are coming to the Switch (which is

Now playing

Pretty much every song in this game is fantastic. I can’t really pick favorites but I’ve always loved Crumbling Lies because it’s got such a strong, powerful start. The vocals really make it pop, the strings are fantastic, and the clock tower style chimes are a brilliant touch. It also does a fantastic job in game

That concept is actually another thing I loved about playing Dragon’s Crown. When you were in camp and it did the cooking minigame, some of the ingredients came from the monsters you killed. Every dish healed you, but certain combinations also gave you stat boosts depending on the spices and ingredients used.

10/10

After all those Elder Scrolls games I spent being called pond scum, it’s been nice getting a more or less free pass this time around. I’ve been somewhat inclined to just throw my lot in with the Khajiit and go on adventures while the rest of Tamriel picks fights with each other.

Squall is the true ellipsis princess.

Makes me think of the little game manuals that used to be included with every game. First thing I used to do before playing a game was read through it or at least browse the controls/gameplay section to get a basic understanding of what I could do. When I was a kid I used to read it in the car on the way home from the

During my first playthrough of FF7 I got up to the point where Aerith was about to die. I was excited to see it since it was an infamous videogame moment by that point (even though the game hadn’t been out for more than a handful of years), so I decided to try and beat the boss before the bus got there instead of

I already do, actually. PJ is one of my favorite runners. He’s funny and he has the weirdest luck with glitches.

Nice! I missed that one.

Well, to be fair, most people in GoT don’t accomplish much of anything. They usually spend a lot of time making plans, then fail or get betrayed before they can accomplish those plans, then die or get thrown into a new situation to repeat the cycle all over again.

It’s not the most well paced book/series. There’s a

Well I’ve heard a lot of runners joke about how learning to run a game makes you hate it and that you should never run a game that you love because you’ll never play it the same way again.

So there may be something to that.

Personally, I’d run a game that I hated. It would be like getting revenge for being terrible to