notedgar
Nevermore
notedgar

What i’m going to say is not directed at you, or even at anyone at Kotaku, but at the videogames blog/site-o-sphere (so it is directed at you, and everyone else): the thing is, roughly 80% of everything written nowadays, about videogames, is negative. “This game does something wrong!”, “That other famous game: how

And yet, sometimes it happens anyway, forced or not.

Except, y’know, it has nothing to do with gender identity, and everything about having a son. Or what you’re telling me is that people in a same sex relationship doesn’t have kids? It IS about growing up.

Not a roman skirt, but one and the same.

He’s a man in a dress, that’s married to another man. Y’know, sometimes, men who marries other men like to wear dresses and such. There’s nothing wrong with that. Why he changed the tie, though?

Oh, it will. People were just right now pissed because of the name of an achievement. The. Name. of. an. ACHIEVEMENT/TROPHY...

Oh boy, I’m glad we didn’t escalated the discussion. I love the game, most people here love it too. And I don’t think there’s something wrong with any characterization or anything like that, or laziness with the writing, just that you misunderstood one little game scene and dropped a great game because of it, and

Yes, sure. She works in the japanese hostess industry, and maybe, the developers being from Japan and all, they know that’s somenthing that happens, frequently, maybe?

The game only shows the name of the characters Kiryu or Majima knows. There are multiple instances were Kiryu never asks the name of the person he is talking, and then, they just go by “tall woman”, “men in a suit”, and such. It has nothing to do with the homeless and whatnot

Welcome to the desert of the real, baby! You gave the answer to your own question. You’re saying it’s okay to trade baseball players, and not, I don’t know, ballet dancers? What’s the difference? In the game, they were the owners of the two greatest cabarets, the leaders of the Sotenbori night industry. It’s business

I guess you misunderstood the scene, y’know? First, you’re missing out, it’s a great game. Second, it’s Japan, it’s unpolite to tip, they receive a fixed salary, or comission, or percentages. Not tips (it’s actually rude to tip). Thirdly, that’s how the hostess industry worked (in 80s Japan), on the first game (Yakuza

Could you tell us a few examples of that?

That’s just... not true. At all.

Majima may be all that, and also one of the most important character throughout the series (at least, as important as Kiryu). He is NOT played for laughs. And almost all other characters in the Yakuza games can be split into those two groups, men and women alike (the male escort industry is a huge part of the series

Yeah... knowing from experience (I’m brazilian, and live in Brazil): those complicated labor laws (we have one of the most complicated law system in the world, period), and all those unionization? All they do is f*ck the worker. It may not seen like that, but over here, let’s say, that I have $3000 to spend on an

I guess it depends on the type of Apocalypse. If there’s clean water, easily available (most types of apocalypse, bar a nuclear one), there is no reason to not clean yourself/your clothes.

Epic bought the exclusivity. As Deep Silver and Koch Media said, it was a deal to secure the future of the franchise as in “investing in the future of the series and our development partner at 4A Games”. So, Epic probably paid a few (or a lot) millions of dollars.

No advice, just sleep. I love sleeping while playing JRPGs, especially Persona 5. Or musou games. Those are my late-night specials. If I had to give any advice, I’d say that avoid playing anything complex when you’re drowsy, just simple, fun, fulfilling games. Get cosy (on the floor, with pillows and a blanket), fire