I use rechargeable batteries. Needing to constantly swap batteries in and out is a much larger annoyance than charging something when the battery gets low.
I use rechargeable batteries. Needing to constantly swap batteries in and out is a much larger annoyance than charging something when the battery gets low.
Maybe. But it was a computer game, not something released on a gaming platform where it would have been available for people to actually play.
Well yeah. I’ll always judge a developer by looking at their history of making lazy and bad games and assume they’re going to continue to make lazy and bad games until they prove otherwise.
Is there some sort of prize money given out whenever someone promotes the insane controller conspiracy? You just have to insert the right buzzwords and you’ll get your prize?
Then sound a like you got a bad battery in the controller. With PS3, 4 and 5 controllers, and Switch, when I get the low battery notification I put it on the charger and switch to another controller, it’s not a hassle at all.
Good job telling on yourself there. Sure, there’s some grand conspiracy where Microsoft is the only company manufacturing a competent controller, but Sony and Nintendo and intentionally using poor quality materials and intentionally conspiring to manufacture poor quality controllers designed to fall apart. But of…
well, they don’t. Do they even have a record of making any games where you play as an actual character? Every game I’m aware of they’ve made is just controlling a camera moving around and shooting things in the face. Every other Indiana Jones game has been abysmally bad, and I really don’t see that changing by…
sounds like your controller broke, you should probably get a new one and be more careful with it, not latch onto some insane conspiracy theory about how every manufacturer of every controller on the market is involved in some massive intentional fraud to sell intentionally defective devices
well, considering who’s developing it, there isn’t really a chance of it being a good game either so they can call it whatever they want to
nope, not going to address an imaginary problem, using a larger capacity battery is something real and tangible, though will do nothing for the whiners who will whine about the battery life no matter what
shame they don’t spend their resources on something worthwhile. The same babies whining about the battery life of the DualSense are going to continue to whine about the battery life no matter what, because its not really about the battery life.
No. I meant the other dedicated gaming console manufacturer that’s interested in selling hardware and software to customers.
How is this news? Does this writer not know what Nintendo’s competitor charges for hardware and games?
you’ve got that backwards, believing in an absurd conspiracy like a flat earth is akin to believing that there’s an absurd conspiracy that every controller manufactured by every manufacturer is intentionally faulty. Using common sense to observe that the world is not in fact flat can also be applied to using common…
Every time I see someone claim they’ve bought 27 controllers and they keep breaking, but they keep buying them anyway and don’t change any of their behavior.
If someone is really going through three or four controllers the most likely explanation is that the user is the one breaking them, not blaming the manufacturer.
The solution is to take care of the things you buy and not to invent comical grand conspiracies blaming the controller for malfunctioning just because you lost at a game.
It’s not. There’s no grand conspiracy of every device manufacturer intentionally manufacturing faulty devices. If you lose at a game, suck it up and practice more, don’t blame the controller.
I’m sure they’ll be able to find some rubes willing to waste $200 because whenever they lose at a game they blame the controller for “drifting”.
Right. That’s kinda the entire point of the game. It’s a visual novel with an RPG tacked on. You’re making deliberate decisions throughout the game that affect your experience. But it’s not a “ticking clock”, there’s no rush to decide who to hang out with after school you have all the time in the world to figure out…