Try playing this game with the Stereoscopic 3D display option turned on. It was one of the only survival horror games released on consoles that used it to great effect, and it’s a COMPLETELY different experience.
Try playing this game with the Stereoscopic 3D display option turned on. It was one of the only survival horror games released on consoles that used it to great effect, and it’s a COMPLETELY different experience.
I’m just frustrated that Sakurai said that Xenoblade Chronicles 2 was announced “too late in development” for them to be able to include Rex and Pyra as playable characters, so they relegated Rex to a freaking Mii Fighter costume and Pyra to a lame cameo Spirit, not even honoring them with an assist trophy.
An amazing chocolate-covered cookie native to Australia but available in places like Target and World Market in the US. They’re good on their own, but the best way to eat one is the “Tim Tam Slam”: Take one Tim Tam and a glass of milk (a wide mug works best, or fill a cup as much as you can), bite off opposite corners,…
As someone with thalassophobia, this is 31 flavors of NOPE for me!
Dammit, now I want some Tim Tams.
As a Long Sword Jedi, I’m all too familiar with using a weapon that most other players completely fail to appreciate.
I mean, this isn’t the first IP intended for adult audiences that got ported into a weird kid-friendly version. There were animated series, video games and kids toys in the 80s and 90s based on R-rated films, covering everything from Robocop and Rambo to Aliens and Terminator. All series that no ten-year-old kid…
I’m having trouble finding anything on whether this will support the PSVR gun like Doom VR did. All they is it will have the standard movement vs "Shooting Gallery" jumping movement. Any word on if we can stare down our functional sniper scopes to pick off Psychos from a few hundred yards?
Agreed on all counts. Plus I genuinely loved the voice acting in the game (especially Nia’s hardcore Welsh accent), and the fact that the majority of main characters were handled by first-time voice actors makes it even more impressive.
Being awake at 6 AM and creating a burn account just to leave an “edgy” bait comment mocking Nintendo in the aftermath of an earthquake.
“This is an act of cowardice.”
Thanks for replying!
First line of this review: “I love Dragon Quest.” Proceeds to give an in-depth and thoroughly fair review obviously written by someone landing square within its target audience.
I suppose it depends on the comic, too. For mine, the entire series is readable online for free on my own hosted site; the book is just a printed collection of the first 100 comics for those who would like a physical copy on their shelf. I have a couple more volumes planned, one of which is actually overdue for…
...well played, Clerks.
A similar thing happens to indie comic artists, too. Around the time my first book got published, I was contacted by someone claiming to run a well-frequented webcomics blog and wanted a review copy of the book. Being my first release, I immediately thought “Hey, awesome! This could be good publicity!” and agreed to…
Wait, you can re-record cutscene audio that plays during actual gameplay? Oh man, can’t wait to hear stories of unsuspecting moms who buy preowned copies of this one for their kids!
Dead teenagers? Never having really played the original, is that a spoiler?
I had no idea you had made a call for Home Depot employee horror stories, or I would have sent mine in in a heartbeat.
“What is even going on, here.”