Is the ‘limited production’ a sign it’ll be digitally delisted or simply that physical copies will be short-lived? Why is Nintendo taking this approach to some of the biggest titles in their library?
Is the ‘limited production’ a sign it’ll be digitally delisted or simply that physical copies will be short-lived? Why is Nintendo taking this approach to some of the biggest titles in their library?
Yeah, shows like BoJack and Big Mouth have redeeming qualities that help them to push past it, but most of the time it’s just... bad. Jumping on a bandwagon and refusing to acknowledge the bandwagon is just full of garbage.
I appreciate that Lego are trying to take one of their ranges in a bold new direction, though it’s a shame this is aimed squarely at kids. Still, I can’t really blame Lego for going in that direction.
I think that’ll probably be my reaction if I ever get round to watching this show; something that’s perfectly digestible, but not terribly interesting or innovative. The Cheerios of television, basically.
“He’s not a child, he’s thirty-four!”
Since Sonic Colors actually gave us an orchestral drowning theme, a similar request for the Sonic sequel seems fair.
If that’s true, it sounds like Nintendo took the wrong lessons from the feedback. The problem isn’t really that a Mario game had a story; it’s that they tried to inject story into a game design that doesn’t need it. Disappointing that they extended that approach to the new Paper Mario games as a result.
I don’t really understand why this policy is in place. What is Nintendo afraid of; that deviating too far from their established designs will alienate their fans?
Yeah, it’s just sat in some vault somewhere that nobody can ever, ever see it. I’m hoping it gets quietly pushed out on Disney+ some day, if only because Seth Mcfarlane’s Palpatine is a delight.
This is one of those things that has always been on the periphery of my gaming vision. I actually have the first game downloaded on my PS3, though I don’t recall getting very far in actually playing it.
As a Brit I found Tahani’s line about British sitcoms in The Good Place hilarious.
I think I get what you’re saying. That said, it’s probably a false equivalency to say JKR’s opinion counts as much as a trans person’s does. Like, on this subject I strongly suspect most trans people are more informed on the subject of trans rights than JKR is, and is more trustorthy and valuable as a result.
That’s kind of a simplistic argument. She’s not just some woman who wrote some books about wizards; she’s an enormously popular author with thousands of followers and a massive platform. Her opinions matter not just because they’re toxic, but because the influence of the person spouting them allows them to spread more…
Well, you just saved me 42 minutes.
Hear, hear. There’s an episode of James May’s Toy Stories where he buys an expensive train set at auction and throws away half the packaging while he’s in the auction house, on the basis that it’s a toy and meant to be played with. I think that’s a good philosophy to live with, and if I collected this kind of thing…
Yep! The game was called Captain Rainbow and came out on wii back in 2008.
Not necessarily. Apparently Nintendo once published a game where you had to retrieve an... *ahem* feminine product that Birdo was using.
I kind of get what they were going for, but it’s a bit lacking in the execution.
It’s tricky because Shirley explicitly identifies it as a hate crime (which, yeah) so any edit to make him inoffensive throws the episode out of kilter, or makes it seem like Shirley is overreacting which isn’t any better. And you can’t take him out entirely because if I recall, his ‘death’ establishes the stakes…