kwalshyall
Kwalshyall
kwalshyall

At least Bobby knows he’s an amoral piece of shit.

Happy to have called this one.

Say what you will, but I think the Ouya 2 shows great promise.

It definitely will. I mean, you can only have the Mountain Dew dancers do their routine on stage so many times before people start to get suspicious that you’re just filling time.

Now playing

Ms. Jackson, if I may supplement your wonderful list with this gorgeous game:

Maybe what’s stressing the kids out at school is all the lead in the air?

When they confront him in the parking garage and ask him to join them. No idea what you’re on about with the, ‘executed in their own home,’ bit.

Yeah, it’s almost like this is a video game criticism website or something.

And people forget that the second Dirty Harry was about a gang of cops killing criminals extrajudicially, inspired by Harry’s vigilantism. Even that absolutely tone deaf 70s shit had the sense to show the consequences of taking the law into your own hands.

The thing that bothered me most about Watchdogs 2 was the lack of a crouch button, making it contextual. Don’t make a stealth-driven game and make crouch contextual. So many other good design choices except for this one.

I know what you mean, but MGS 2 - 5 is a better explanation of US Cold War politics and their reverberations decades after than most people get in their high school history class, from both a historical and psychosocial perspective, despite the endless wacky bullshit. 

Yeah, I think they were hoping to use 76 as a passive revenue generator between larger, costlier titles like ES6, Starfield, and whatever Fallout 5 ends up being. That said, the Private Equity firm that has the controlling stake in ZeniMax Media, Providence Equity Partners, would 100% force monetization on ES6 if 76

Finally, I can kiss him.

Right? Jumping from 1 to 16/24 players as opposed to a tighter 1-4 person group definitely feels like biting off more than you can chew. And we’ve seen the results.

I thought these were going to be the RDR Online version of GTA V’s Heists, but have thus far found them pleasingly approachable as a solo player.

More like TadBoo

Man, I wish someone would pay me to make these kind of insane and terrible business decisions.

I know what you mean, with how meticulous everything feels (cleaning your guns; cleaning your horse; food, rest, and haircuts for Arthur––shaving!). I felt the same way for a while, too, but pushed through over the Christmas holidays and found that it picks up pace and intensity as the story progresses.

I think RDR2's story is big enough and complete enough that it doesn’t need an addition. But no single player content at all? I know I’m in the minority here (or maybe not) but I haven’t dropped a dime on GTA Online, and won’t be doing so for RDR2 Online either.