theazureguy
azureguy
theazureguy

My headcanon has always been that Quarians are similar to frogs. They both have three fingers, digitigrade legs and webbed feet (at least the shoes they wear suggest that).
In Mass Effect 1 one of Tali’s idle animations has her jump up a bit sort-of which reminded me a lot of a frog preparing to jump as well. There’s

Well-spoken. If this were any other game, the criticism would be more justified. But a Yoko Taro game is all about holding a mirror in front of the player and asking him questions like “Do you enjoy killing hundreds of people, video game or not?”. (that was the deal with Drakengard, anyway)

Shadow Man is a great game. It’s a metroidvania of sorts where you collect souls to unlock new areas. Sometimes it’s only one area, other times you have more than one area to explore.

Final Fantasy VII Remake’s easy mode worked quite well for having a button-mashing combat experience. No stress whatsoever, just use some abilities and you’re good to go. This would already be enough to give story players a good time. But if they allow fights to be skipped entirely (at the cost of not counting for

Those were not the best versions available, though. I never checked out Rock & Roll Racing, but they only offered the DOS version of The Lost Vikings. Not sure if Blackthorne was even available, either way I haven’t tried it out either.

Shame there is no The Lost Vikings 2 included in this package, but considering how unlikely it was to see such an elaborate re-release in the first place, it is better than nothing.

Now playing

As with anything, there is a Simpsons scene for that:

Spoilers for anyone who only read the headlines and is waiting for the Legendary Edition to play through the series for the first time.

Now playing

It depends on the game I guess. I’ve discovered some videos with Donkey Kong Country 2 tracks using samples that are as close to “original source but uncompressed” as possible. It’s definitely not to its detriment in this case:

btw, if there seems to be something missing in this post, I think hyperlinks are broken as of late.

It depends.

It’s a reference to the Stonks meme.

I replay games when they get a re-release on another platform like Dark Cloud on PS4 or Tales of Vesperia: Definite Edition on PC. Rarely I would play a game again after a long time of beating it originally (I played Strider last year, which I first-played when it was released back in 2014). I don’t replay that many

It’s all explained in the second link, after GE64 released and was a big success, they didn’t like how the game “represented” Bond and started adding fees and guidelines to it. No blood, no Bond dying, no civilian kills, no good vs good characters in multiplayer, no cheats, no use of Bond theme, Bond model

I got the game as a gift when I was young for good grades in school. It was in a big cardboard box along with a strategy guide (not sure if this was a Germany-only thing or if this was the case for all of Europe. I think Super Metroid also got this treatment, but I never got it back then.)

I think RE3 standings its own is fine. I started the series with RE4 so I never knew about the overlapping playthroughts in RE2 which are missing in the remake (which is a real disappointment). RE3, at least, made trying to 100% it easy for someone like me who was burned out from both his job and RE2's 100%.

I picked up SimCity 4 a few years ago. I didn’t know what to expect, so the music was a pleasant surprise. The four tracks featured on this article are also my favorites of the game, especially Electric City. It’s neither a Japanese-style music nor the occasional orchestral Western track I hear in RPGs like Skyrim.

I’m surprised by this. Why would any company try to go for an old-fashioned MMO setup in this day and age?

Not to mention that the game was released too late. It should’ve released last year to capitalize on the hype for Avengers: Endgame.