richardrae1
richardrae1
richardrae1

He sure did in the original Burton/Keaton movie. And in the comics in his early days (carried a .45 and had a machine gun on the Batplane).

Actually, a Dreamcast 2.0 is, more or less, an Xbox or an Xbox 360. The controller design is nearly the same, note. I loved my Dreamcast. And I still love it. The Japanese output for it was superb, and there was much more for it in Japan than was ever released in the US and the UK.

Polish army mech? Might have been helpful if they'd used these in 1939.

Definitely looks as if he was inspired to some extent by Kow Yokoyama's Maschinen Krieger series. I love gritty mecha work like this.

"Beware of wells."

Way too many opportunities here...

Back in B&W Mac days, I remember one game made with World Builder was put out by its creator, and if after you went a certain number of moves with a protected copy (that didn't have the matching invisible file on the disk) it said 'The pirate says, "Ha ha!'" and dumped you into a pit where you would die fighting off

Sounds like a virtual asteroid collided with the Earth in "The Stomping Land," and wiped out the virtual dinosaurs.

My initial hope when I heard of its pending release is that it would be a new side story set in the same world but with different objectives and a different, yet interlocking, story. Nope. So I'll stick with my Xbox 360 version.

The opening show (mentioned at the bottom) is "Fantastic Show 'Fancy Guy!'"

The Takarazuka Theater is widely known for its superb performances with all roles played by women. It's a national treasure in Japan. Everyone who is even remotely familiar with "Sakura Taisen" (Sakura Wars) realizes the entire structure and basis of the Teikoku Kagekidan is inspired directly from Takarazuka's

Been done, assuming you're not kidding. :) In fact, some great songs in there, notably "The Arbiter" and "Merchandisers."

It could be argued that there already IS a sequel to Chess- that would be Kriegspiel, where each player plays with and sees his own pieces, but can't see the other player's pieces. A referee is necessary so that he can tell a player if a move he makes is legal or illegal, whether there's a check, etc. Also known as

Excellent job! But he does point out one question I've had as I play the game- why the hell does anyone in a full-face helmet need a sweat rag around their neck? :)

What? 10-28-2014. What's so hard about that? Some of us DID learn Roman numerals in school.

What I'd like to see is the ability to actually melee more than just a one-kick kill or a sneaky neck-snap, as was shown here where he knocks the enemy flat and stabs him. Some players just jump around wildly instead of trying to dodge or shoot.

Now, if they were walking on LEGO pieces in the same area, THAT would be entertaining.

The "Wa-" part comes from the Japanese "Warui" which essentially means "no good" or "bad." So "Wario" is bad Mario (with a Japanese slant pun), and "Waluigi" is "Bad Luigi", but also sounds to Japanese ears like "Warui-gi" which makes it a better pun.

I'm kind of partial to Maritan, myself- the language drill that tries to teach you to talk like Sgt. Hartman from "Full Metal Jacket." The pages where they try to define the terms used in the bubble are hilarious.

If there's anything amusing about this, it's that, if it had been real, the guy would actually waste $1.50 per pie and buy all the pies- plus local tax, if any- and given the quality of the writing, it's unlikely he would have had that much on hand. He also would not have written all that out just to ask people "Was I