quetzelcoatltheleaf
Aleaf Inwind
quetzelcoatltheleaf

https://twinfoxstudio.com/

That’s my website :) Though some of the stuff there is a bit outdated. Either things have an NDA and/or never got published (sadly cancelling is a very common thing in the industry) so I can’t post a lot of recent works. You could also write me a message there if you like and we could move

I noticed that too with the comments, there is a difference between a remaster and a remake. One that stuck out was calling it the Dead Space remaster but it was a full on remake.

I believe there’s a right time for it, especially if the original game is so old it’s barely playable. Would love to see a Silent Hill 1 remake.

That was my thought as well. I know a lot of people here show up more for the comment section than the article, but I don't think turning the comment section into an article is the solution for that lol. 

Same. I LOVED MK11 and this looks good but I went from intetested at launch to "maybe when a definitive edition is discounted".

I need it to not offer up good deals, because despite the size of my library, I still see games I want, and I know I’m unlikely to actually play most of them. Someone do surgery on my brain or something.

I agree with this completely. There are certainly benefits to matchmaking but I miss the old model of having servers/lobbies that were run by a person.

Playing a game long enough, I’d be able to recognize server/host names that were good and end up becoming friends with people after playing with them multiple times. I

Thank you so much! I designed it myself :)

I also loved the first remake a lot and I hope the second part is going to add to that but I can’t help to be skeptical about it, especially as someone working in the industry myself. Usually we as a concept artist have to stick very close to the original in order to hit that

Naughty Dog announces Last of Us Part 3 Remaster ahead of Last of Us Part 3.

I look forward to their inevitable kickstarter that promises a series of 16 novels, 4 graphic novels, a webshow on Twitch, a podcast, a lore wiki, design document portfolios (both digital and printed on A3-sized cotton-rag archival paper), plushies, resin figurines, scripts, soundtracks, orchestral soundtracks,

The entire executive structure and the business/corporate landscape is a shining example of how universally true it is that, “When the profit motive becomes unmoored from the purpose motive, bad things happen.”
(taken from “Drive: The Surprising Truth About What Motivates Us” by Daniel H. Pink)

Shit like this makes me glad I left the private sector and moved into an academia adjacent job. Pay isn’t as good but the pension is great and so are the perks, especially the amount of time off I get. But most importantly there’s so much less bullshit. No irritating middle management trying to justify their existence

Milton fucking Friedman. That’s the guy.

They went on their buying spree while rates were low.  We are seeing higher rates, and a worldwide shift in demographics.  A whole lot of industries are about to contract regardless of what else goes on.  Gen Z is entering the work place and there are less of them than boomers who are leaving.  The US has millenials,

You can thank Milton Freidman, one of Ronald Reagan’s major financial advisors, for that bs. In the 60s and 70s, corporations looked after their people because they had a broader view that if the employees were taken care of, the communities they live it would thrive, and that in the long term would be better for

I dont have the energy for the long response.  But basically in the 60s some right wing economist proposed that the only point of corporations should be maximizing shareholder value.  This caught on fairly quickly, and got propogated by consulting firms like McKinsey, who then spent the next few decades coming in to

It’s a pretty interesting term, though. Crocs are known to shed tears while eating, so way back in the BCE times it was a saying that crocodiles wept for their victims as they ate them. The saying basically called out people who privately wished harm on others but then publicly mourned for them after harm befell them

I’ve seen this a lot. The company I work for serves a specific industry, and after the crash of 2008, when lots of construction was put on hold, a few major international companies hoovered up most of the independent small/regional companies.

Fast forward a few years, and these major international corporations found

“Maximizing shareholder value” is the biggest turd of corporate speak. As Boeing can attest, it means delivering short-term gains for stockholders (and bonuses for the exec team) at the expense of the company’s long-term health.

the lead writer behind the Mass Effect series