The article title.
The article title.
I pretty much saved it for co-op sessions only and had a blast, but I can see where you're coming from insofar as many of the levels seemed built specifically for group play.
Yeah I hate 2.5D for Mario. If it's going to be a 2D game, bring back sprites for god's sake.
Holy s—-, Andriasang says that the first patch is for Mario Kart 7, and will fix all the shortcut issues in the game. Good god, I might actually play it online again.
Yes. I was hoping that a NSMB2 would be a throwback to that zany black-sheep of the franchise, complete with Shy Guys and all. But nope, it appears to have the same damn assets as the first NSMB. What the hell.
I'd be all over it. Mario hasn't had a 3D game focused on exploration and free-play like that in ages. Well, since Sunshine, come to think of it.
Fair enough, I just like arguing, and I found it to be a fine place to do so, thanks to your well-written opening (even if I am oriented pretty differently as far as favorite genres, etc). :)
Ha, I never made that connection. But honestly, I don't believe the Dreamcast controller had any real impact on the world during that tiny lifespan, its loud die-hard fans notwithstanding. I'm not sure MS can blame their reversed buttons on a short-lived console when X/Y A/B was burned into the collective minds of…
Wow, I haven't seen one since the 90s.
I still can't forgive the reversed A/B X/Y buttons. I refuse to remap my brain from the glory days of SNES. Why not pick something new like Sony did with their shapes? Why did MS take the existing button names from a competitor and just reverse them? WHY??
Nope, immersion (in the manner it is presented above) is the future of technology, or specifically just a subset of tech. But it's not the future of gaming, because those are two different things that only intersect.
This one is developed outside, yes, but Nintendo has a ton of different in-house or co-developed franchises out there which often get overlooked.
I'd love to see him in person. That bit above is from his "A Thousand Kisses Deep," which has appeared both as a poem and as a song, always with slightly different verses (not unlike the multiple variations of "Hallelujah").
True, that's a rare occurrence for a cartoon adaptation to add something significant back to a comic book franchise like that.
Well, that and two of the most memorable voices ever tied to the franchise (Hamil's Joker and Conroy's Batman).