It is, and Dragon Ball Super is infamous for its crushing deadlines and subsequent choppy, hastily-produced animation. Hopefully this is a sign of improvement.
It is, and Dragon Ball Super is infamous for its crushing deadlines and subsequent choppy, hastily-produced animation. Hopefully this is a sign of improvement.
This has been common knowledge for years.
I just jumped into this series with Kiwami 1 (it was on discount, too) and I have to say, it’s a great jumping-on point. I’ll probably follow it up with 0 while I wait for Kiwami 2.
This is the most Dragon Ball thing ever. Man, what a game.
“Finale of an origin story” seems a bit silly. “End of the beginning” and all that, but origin stories aren’t usually a trilogy (except Star Wars, and we all know how that went).
Tommy Wiseau’s political campaign tagline: Still Better than Trump.
There’s a mobile port?!
Snake, can love bloom, even on a battlefield?
Goku’s ultimate form... for now.
Games with open worlds can also prove entrancing to gaming newcomers.
That and Luigi’s Mansion is why Luigi is not only by far my favorite Mario character (which isn’t saying much), but also one of my favorite videogame characters of all time. Respect for the lean, mean green machine.
For a second there I thought he was playing as some sort of conscientious objector, which would be fascinating. Still, that’s very impressive too!
Says the guy who looked at the Paper Mario series and went “you know what, this has too much personality, make it blander.”
You had me at Hotel Dusk.
Just got Golf Story on Switch so that’s one of them. Will keep playing FighterZ too and possibly some Rocket League.
I mean, he just got slapped across the face and knocked unconscious. That’s pretty much a clear response to the meme being crap.
Why wouldn’t they, though? It makes them money with barely any extra cost, doesn’t it? And especially given the Switch’s popularity, it’d be weird to leave that money on the table.
Okay, okay, I concede the point.
*raises hand*
It’s not that niche if my girlfriend, a non-gamer if I’ve ever met one, knew it when we started dating. That’s not to say you don’t have a point, but I think Zelda is still fairly ubiquitous, though obviously not on the level of Mario.