nothingamazing
Nobody
nothingamazing

Man, this is way more nuanced and complex than anybody has yet to address.

“... for different audiences.”

* For the sake of profit. It’s never some kind of selfless crusade/endeavor to share otherwise unobtainable beauty with everyone possible. It’s always about maximizing profit by maximizing the target audience. If it were at all possible to water down a war film to the point where it was

There’s a pandemic.
It’s not over.
Don’t go.

Making up for it” should definitely not be doing the bare minimum. First of all, IMO, game stores of all shapes and sizes should always have a return option, standard. Then, developers shouldn’t lie about their games to begin with.

Being “better” isn’t always the best path.

It’s extremely common that people who have been playing a certain way, will want to continue playing that way, even with the introduction of new platforms and hardware. CS players from way back still wanting to play on 4:3 aspect ratios, console players moving to PC and still

Weird.

Nobody is saying there shouldn’t be justice and order.

I’m no expert, but it seems like an autograph/signature would have been more of a stamp or authenticity than anything. Any value derived from it would have originally stemmed from the signature verifying that an object was legitimate, or actually-used-by-the-person-of-fame (baseball bats, balls, etc.) Also, there

I spent, like, six hours playing “ancient” NES an SNES games last week. Splitting NSO with my brother-in-law, who got the Family membership on a deal, $15 (our half of the cost) is a good deal for a year of supporting Nintendo’s online infrastructure, telling them that people want Online things (that’s important, too,

I got a Switch for father’s day. For me, for every game on my wish list, I find myself saying aloud, “that would be fun on the go/in another room/not on this terrible couch/at your sister’s house when we go there for Independence Day/easy multiplayer with the nephew on his Switch, etc.”

“This is likely why upcoming games are still being announced for “last gen” consoles” - You

I can almost guarantee you the larger threat of financial loss is a wide-spanning deterrent. And I’m sure the lawyers were, like, “we don’t need to ruin this guy’s life over this - but let’s not let him just walk away and forget about what transpired here”.

You could have taken the high road - learned Japanese, visited the birth place of modern video gaming and made a grand experience of it, picked up some (inexpensive!) JP consoles and a boat load of games. It would have been an adventure, maybe life changing, and thoroughly fulfilling beyond just playing some games.

- There’s an ongoing pandemic.
- The people with the most money are taxed the least, leaving our infrastructure anemic and unprepared for the change it was forced into, let alone recovery from that change.
- The government is more negligent and irresponsible with its spending than a poorly educated family just having

... What. You’re joking with that response, right? Your entire first paragraph is unnecessary at best, and ignorant at worst. Even if you somehow knew what everybody here was mentally and physically capable (it’s hilariously bad that you think you do), why even bring up whether or not the angry public is capable of

Part of me wants Sora, because he’s just such a wholesome, complex option - an awesome bag of tricks and techniques/references to draw from.

No, this is a different Amazon.

No, this is a different Amazon.

I had forgotten this game existed.
I thought we were all in agreement that we were going to collectively forget about this game’s existence.

... It’s a fighting game. The *most* complex thing it has to do is draw the characters. The next most difficult task is hit detection between, like, *maybe* six or eight rectangle.

You talk like Nintendo doesn’t employ over 6,000 people, and hadn’t single-handedly revived home video gaming from a horrible depression, and doesn’t have a record of consistently bringing family-friendly joy to the masses, or that it still doesn’t to this day.