harrymfa
Commenter-X
harrymfa

I have a Mac and I’m shocked that 80% of the games are available. Developers realized we had money?

Freaking Tower Records. Rest in peace.

If you don’t trust that article, don’t worry, the Internet is full of stuff like that to back me up. Like the infographic here (that displays in the early 90s, the era of the SNES, the average game hovered around $70 green, adjusted for inflation yellow). Or this very long and detailed blog post that touches the

I’m just going to leave you this here.

Wrong. The average SNES game was $70, and I never paid more than $40 for a PSX game. I know that because in the 90s I worked at a video store to support my gaming.

How dare anyone say something bad about Altered Beast?

After getting a PS4 I realized that with the fee I pay to play online, I could have gotten a PC with the same specs, and 90% of its library is already on Steam.

Presales actually had a pro-consumer purpose. Some stores would sell out of a game on launch and you had to wait a week for restocking.

I played Skyrim to the part I meet Paarthurnax. I was nodding off during his speech, and I realized the sun had been up for an hour, and I’ve been playing Skyrim for 18 hours straight.

And Chinese will just watch pirated copies from somewhere else, as they always do.

It’s a clever scheme to make you pay as much as you’d paid for an MMO subscription. That accounting was made a while ago.

You are probably not even going to get out of the same planets for now. That new patrol area reeks of that Old Chicago, or Old Europe that they teased with a new map.

I think Call of Duty should have been like that. Call those annual entries “expansions” because that’s really what they are, plus you get the benefits of all the maps stacking year after year.

My problem is not the console’s sticker price. My problem is having to pay a fee to play online, which I don’t have to with the PS3 (and I heard the Wii U works the same way).

I think this anime/manga is going to end up like the show LOST. It started strong, but it doesn't know how to progress to a satisfying end.

The console game that a laptop is the second controller.

Vice City showed the potential of doing GTA as a period piece. I think Liberty City would be far more interesting in the 70s (1970s NYC had high crime, riots, graffiti, a cocaine-fueled soccer team, even a serial killer, Son of Sam). London? Perhaps the 60s.