Y'shtola is really popular in Japan for some reason, and to be fair she is one of the more capable charecters in the series.
Y'shtola is really popular in Japan for some reason, and to be fair she is one of the more capable charecters in the series.
No I mean in Dissidia as playable characters.
We sorta got the Gundam Vs arcade/PS3 game, it's called rise of the incarnates. They didn't think Gundam would sell, so they made a western version of it.
I mean, Populous and Dungeon Keeper...both classics. He's no Uwe Boll. He's just one old school game designer among many who failed to adapt to the much more complicated management of later generation games. He's a relic of an era where one or two people could develop an entire game. That's a whole different beast…
I understand your complaints entirely, especially his empty promises. That being said, despite its super short runtime, I actually loved Fable. All 10 hours of it.
He did, have you played Magic Carpet, Black & White, Syndicate, Theme Hospital, Dungeon Keeper and Populous series !!? .... they are great games and very innovative .. overall his bullfrog days are the best .. and with the exception of Black & White Lionhead studios where the start of his downfall ... it seems like…
Populous was great.
Black and White was amazing.
Black and White was actually quite good—it's what got him into a position where he could continuously make lofty promises that would later turn out to be either complete bollocks, or suffer from half-baked execution.
He burned me one time. Just once. Fable (XBox).
I bought into the hype on that one hook, line and…
Right, because Black and White and Populous sucked, not to mention how god awful Fable was!
Thanks! Love podcasts.
Case in point, I had never heard of either of them but it seems pretty funny so I'll probably look them up now. Many of the things that the kotaku netizens knock them for reporting late on is often the first time I've ever heard of said thing/meme.
The Verge wrote a profile that talks about who the men actually are, and how they actually feel about this phenomenon. I thought it was a good article, so I brought it to Kotaku's attention. If I explain who these people are, it's because I don't assume everyone automatically knows all of the internet's memes.
That's a weird way of writing Mitsuru.
I wonder if he makes a 4chan from his employers?