I would prefer to keep the bugs if they’d released a game in scope anywhere near what they marketed.
I would prefer to keep the bugs if they’d released a game in scope anywhere near what they marketed.
I agree. I played it for a good chunk on PC, encountered no gamebreaking bugs and it still felt like much of the gameplay mechanics were rushed and unfinished.
Living in a place that hit 115 several times last week, how about implementing some of the Quarantine stuff when there’s inclement weather?
The biggest lie of modern capitalism: grow or die.
“You can’t go up forever. Peaking isn’t a bad thing.”
It IS another Souls game, and I DO like those!
Oddly negative tone at the end of the article, which is unusual, since as you said, Miyazaki’s titles have been quite strong.
I’ll continue to shout this to the heavens: Andromeda is a good game! But it VERY OBVIOUSLY got rushed, and a lot of story elements just didn’t get to breathe, and it DEFINITELY had way too much filler
Having played and scoured those planets more than once in the past I have zero compunctions about pulling up a website full of maps of every unexplored world in ME1 so I can just drive straight to the points of interest.
Was thinking about the ME remaster last night, as I’m almost done with 1. I kinda respect the fact that, while they smoothed some of the rough edges, they didn’t remake the game and left it’s existing flaws in place. It’s a good reminder of how far console RPGs have come since then. As far as I can tell, I still can’t…
That suicide forest video was the first time I had ever heard of him and now I’m forced to have knowledge of this blight forever.
I’m a strong believer of separating art from artists, but when possible buying things in ways that don’t give shitty people money. Buy Detroit: Become Human used at a GameStop so that it doesn’t filter money to David Cage. It’s a genuinely good game.
“When should we see returns?”
“Oh, in about 6 months in the form of a corporate hack and or terrorist event.”
The fact that people were making this whole thing as some kind of “innovative” and “door opening” phenom, even though it was literally just buying art with extra steps, was all the red flag I needed to see.
Especially as freelance artist, it’s weird how many people were like “this is going to be a big win for the art…
Some money got laundered.
I imagine a lot of that trading in probably coincided with Blockbuster no longer having kiosks to print out your photos.
Pokémon Snap: