hdefined2
hdefined2
hdefined2

What would be an example of this?

I can’t speak about the sequel yet, but the original . . . I mean, Dolphin is also an option.

I don’t understand this at all. The fact that some people (I don’t see any) react to this one article with anger and vitriol doesn’t tell you anything about how strongly they feel about any other issue.

The Koreas don’t have a border war. The border was established after the war came to a standstill.

It’s not “racist” to want borders.”

Oh geez . . . 40 minutes . . . I’m intrigued but perhaps not that intrigued.

They tend to mostly review the big games.

I don’t even know how you can qualify such a claim. 

It sounds like, if you haven’t played the Xenoblade series, you would absolutely love it. I’m playing the switch version of the first Xenoblade and it’s just as good as it was back on Wii.

I love AC games, but I think there’s something to be said that the two you enjoyed were the only two you played. I play all of them, and I still enjoy them, but depending on the game, the burnout arrives sooner or later.

I was excited for Ori’s sequel, and then the first sequence took 45 minutes until I got to a save point. Does the pacing get better after that?

You know what? I feel like, maybe since Ocarina of Time or GTA3, game developers have been obsessed with the idea of creating bigger and more astounding worlds, and now I think their challenge should be . . . regardless of the size of the world, to make each area/region/however you want to subdivided the space worthy

the time I got through most of Odyssey and it’s DLC, just to get to Atlantis (probably my favorite mythological location), I literally explored it for about 15 minutes before realizing it contained all of the same tasks I had done dozens and dozens of other times before, and quit without returning to it since.”

No one can base their opinion of the game on any review if they haven’t played the game.

MGS did a lot of things well for its time. It does a lot of things well today. Good gameplay, by 2020 standards, isn’t one of those things. Try replaying it.

You can answer your own question by reading what I wrote and seeing if I actually said that.

I keep forgetting what Color Splash was, and assuming it’s something I’d like, and then I remember the card-based, touch-screen battle system. Ugh.

I can’t stand Nintendo’s practice of announcing games practically right before release (and they’ve been doing this for years now).

Do you have to buy it on release day?

Jesus christ, Xenoblade: DE came out only a month or so ago. I don’t have time for Death Stranding yet.