You can also tell by the pixels!
You can also tell by the pixels!
Quilava
As a teen I liked Blaziken. I’d opted to go for Fire-type starters since the Cyndaquil was awesome and was pleasantly surprised by a Fire/Fighting type. At the time it became one of my favorite Pokémon, it was just that cool.
I heard Shigeru Ohmori likes Mudkip...
Pika Pikachu, pikachu pi, pichupi Pikapi, pika pi pikachu!
It’s not an omnibus, but if he happens to like Star Wars, the paperback collections of the new Star Wars Marvel series are pretty enjoyable. I recommend the main Star Wars comic and Star Wars: Darth Vader, both of which have two volumes already collected. The Lando series is also reportedly very good.
Yeah but the fun of comparing starters with others gets a bit lost in the mix.
It was fun back in the day but gameplay-wise, losing the autonomy to choose a starter, which added an interest and very personal touch to the early game, as well as being stuck with an unevolving Pikachu somewhat removed one of the best parts of the original games: choosing your companion and watching him grow, quite…
Out of all of those, I appreciate Dont’s review the most. I really enjoy Street Fighter but I’m not that great and not really interested in the competitive aspect - I frankly only wanted them to make a singleplayer on par with Mortal Kombat’s, that would’ve been enough for me to consider the game.
Get out.
Shit just got real.
Well he was literally number 1 on the Pokédex, yes.
Nobody likes the anime references. Having the three starters in one game, on the other hand...
Well in Japan the argument is moot. Pokémon Blue was the superior version, simply because it was a “definitive edition” of sorts of Red/Green, with new pixel art and a lot of fixes.
I’d settle for the old-school version having an official, proper resolution fix on modern operating systems. Even KOTOR II has gotten a better treatment than KOTOR on Steam.
Oh yeah, that makes a lot more sense. Sorry for being nitpicky, just trying to help!
A bit off-topic, but if that’s the hardest working on an indie game with a team might be, man, I envy them. My workplace is somewhat like that but we don’t even have a microwave. Or heating. Or the satisfaction of reading rave reviews for the project you dedicated so much to.
They should name themselves the Eeveelkyries.