kelseylang
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kelseylang

I've played the very beginning of VI, but other than that, nope no experience! I'm kinda of excited :D

(・。・;) That's my only gripe. Maybe next year?

You know, I'm honestly kind of excited about both. Those two have always been on my list to play, but for some reason I've never gotten around to them. This might give me the chance. I totally get what you're saying though since many participating probably have :)

DQ V is also my favorite! I figured though that since DQ VIII has a more expansive world and sticks to a main party of characters that it might be easier for beginners to get into. Interestingly though, I found DQ V to be a little easier overall than VIII. I'm not honestly sure why. Maybe because since VIII was my

Honestly? Most of my friends aren't really into video games at all. Due to the environment I grew up around when I was younger, it was hard to make fellow girl friends that had my interests, so now I go basically off of personality and nothing else even to this day. So yeah, not much overlap hobbywise. And all my guy

Oh Pete, one day Phyllis will finally see you for the pelican you are. One day...

I like Smash Bros alright, probably would only pick it up if I had enough friends interested in playing with me, but if Brewster was playable? Day freaking one no questions asked.

I felt that it was more paying homage to those locations since it's implied that the world could very well be within Oliver's mind. If that's the case, a 10-year-old child would most definitely make up similar locations to what he's read/played/watched/whatever.

As for the dialogue and hand-holding, though, I do

I personally loved Ni No Kuni, but I understand why it rubbed people the wrong way. The combat can be very jarring, especially if you try out the demo before purchasing the full game. I did that, and I bit my fingernails for months since I had decided to jump in on the huge collector's edition. Thankfully I ended up

He's a bit overused, but for good reason, especially back in the day. Ah, such memories.

I've thought it's been Atari for years now. Shows what I know.

Oh yeah, Yuri and Judith sorta had a thing, but I definitely think it was more of a casual flirting than anything more serious. Yeah, I really liked that the game focused more on different sorts of relationships instead of just "I secretly love you" or "We are now bound for life." It was nice.

You know, in the 2D art, they don't look half bad. It's more their representation in 3D graphics that makes me question their design decisions. Hm.

And if you flip the coin, Yuri honestly had a lot more chemistry with Flynn. Huh.

Is it bad that I can actually see how Yuri and Flynn would have way, way more chemistry than Yuri and Estelle? hahah. Good to know it's not me; and yeah, seeing anything with Yuri being in a slot other than number one is odd. He deserves it, hell yeah, but that "romance" must've really tanked since it... well, wasn't

So I have a question for anyone who has played Vesperia: Did you guys honestly see Yuri and Estelle as a couple? One of my favorite things about the game was I felt that they had more of a big brother/little sister relationship than a romantic one. It was a really nice change of pace JRPG-wise - well, honestly,

[11:04 AM]: women under 5'5 shouldnt be above 100. i fucked an escort who was 5'5 120 and i thought she was fat. i realized women withotu clothes are much uglier than with clothes

But doesn't a boomerang only come back to you if you miss your target?

Only people who can't hit a target have to have a weapon that has some chance of coming back to them.

Oh my gosh, you're right! It does look a lot like Samurai Jack! But yeah, I appreciate both forms of animation equally. They have very different goals usually, so it's really hard to declare that one is better than the other, which I wouldn't want to do anyway :)