snufkin
Snufkin
snufkin

Skyrim's ending may have sucked, but at least I eventually got around to seeing it. I finished Skyrim and Morrowind (even the pretty lame Red Mountain portion,) but I'll probably never finish Oblivion. Too many Oblivion gates. Too many bandits with crazy armor. Too little reward for taking on extra challenge. Too much

I'd probably swap the positions of Arena and Daggerfall on my list—I could never really get into Arena, and Daggerfall gets some points for sheer ambition. They both have terrible interfaces, though.

Anyone who doesn't agree that Mojang's Scrolls is the best Elder Scrolls game is wrong. Totally, undeniably wrong. So very, very wrong.

Sounds interesting.

'Tis glorious.

No, I like the early art too. Schulz' later work was a little too sterile and disciplined for my taste.

Realm of the Mad God is, technically, an MMO. It runs in a browser though, so...

*shrug*

Not really the most effective form of trolling, is it?

Uh?

Hey now THAT sounds like a gameplay I style I could get into. I'll just roleplay an idiot. Sounds like fun.

I've never been a big fan of games with permadeath, but that's particularly true with games that are online only.

It's a blog, it's supposed to be sujbective!

People are a bigger problem than video games, because people eventually effect more people.

Decent, but that's still a $40 game. A 75% discount would make it tempting, even with the always-on connection and other headaches—assuming the reviews are good.

Nope. I don't hate Origin.

Well since it's the Digital Deluxe version that's no problem. I'll just wait until Steam puts it on sale for $10 and...

Sometimes companies would be well served to analyze why people didn't like something rather than just dismissing the whole thing as a bad idea.

I really, really wanted to like The Cave more than I did. It's not a bad game, but I guess I've learned to expect more than "okay" from Double Fine. There's way too much backtracking, it's too easy (once you figure out how to do simple things like select your characters,) the first playthrough is too short, and

Okay, lemme get the public service announcement out of the way first: if you've got Grim Fandango CDs lying around, Quick and Easy Software (at quickandeasysoftware.net) provides a free, open source installer and launcher you can use to get Grim Fandango working under 32 and 64-bit Windows 7, Vista and XP (and maybe