samuel-james-reha-old
Samuel James Reha
samuel-james-reha-old

@Adam Harrison: Oh, please. Ohio's even one of the more famous states.

@PsychoNun: Well, yeah, it'll probably end up totaling a smaller library, but that doesn't directly impact the communities of the individual games.

@PsychoNun: I played a few round of GoldenEye the other day, and there didn't seem to be a dearth of players. Hell, I even popped The Conduit in last month and I could still find full games.

@Dexomega: Well, what else COULD it have been beyond human error or an equipment malfunction?

@p4w4rr10r: Eh, kinda. Even then, beyond a few nods like the door-breach sequences, it doesn't feel particularly like a Call of Duty clone, either.

@Eggyhead85: Pretty much. This new GoldenEye game is technically a new IP by Activision, meaning Rare can't legally get its fingers in it. That's good news for Nintendo, if you consider they've likely been trying to get a solid FPS lineup for the NA / Europe market for a while now, plus Nintendo's shown interest in

@p4w4rr10r: Yeah, I thought it was pretty great, too. Solid A effort all around, especially considering how its ties to the N64 original are superficial at best.

@Eggyhead85: Pretty low, Nintendo's likely signed an exclusivity deal with Activision.

"Mutant Bash TV, they say, plays a lot like id's Doom Resurrection for the iPhone, an on-rails, tilt-controlled first person shooter with new rules."

I was wondering when they'd decide to make earphones that didn't make my ears bleed my own blood.

@AshTR: It's from the first person perspective and you shoot. You can't get more FPS than that.

@Mr. Dent: Yeah, MGM pretty much refuses to let any developer use a Bond likeness other than the most current one, because they feel that doing so helps strengthen the franchise.

@iRhuel: That's almost the message I got, but that's also wildly inaccurate. It's a very good FPS, and definitely one of the best to be found on the Wii.

@Ackbar-is-The-Boss: No, it was actually Wolfenstein 3D that was the first FPS as we know it. Along with its spiritual successor, DOOM, it established many of the tropes, cliches, and technology that would become ubiquitous to the FPS genre.

@tselliot: Ignoring the fact that back then the Democrats were more similar to today's Republicans, and vice versa.