Wow that was incredibly self indulgent.
Wow that was incredibly self indulgent.
Spoilers:
So because Kotaku posts one of these stories a month then the rest of the world should be reading them?
SPOILERS:
Anyone else feel like a complete shit when you're talking to Anderson in the beginning? I mean, he's fighting a losing war of attrition amidst an urban hellscape and here I am...subletting a Citadel fuckpalace that he had stashed away?
This is a ramble that could have done with some tightening. The most glaring transgression being that Mr. B leads with "games are cheaper now than ever before."
Wow. I prefer my Xbox over Playstation, but damn...that's an incredibly silly thing to say man.
The Kinect was a failure? In what universe? It might not cater to core gamers, but it sold well and it's popular with casuals.
Relax people. It is a bit irresponsible of Mr. Hamilton to portray this as a new practice, but all he has to do is include an addendum at the end clearing his omission up.
Beep beep. Quality content right here.
You probably shouldn't throw around words like "great" when referring to things that you've only had glimpses of in demo videos on the internet.
Tentatively optimistic. Cyber punk is under appreciated nowadays. Especially considering it's sort of becoming a reality in our lifetimes.
I just wanted to see the console run some games. Not a run down of all the features that Sony will give up on half way through implementing.
They should have taken a page out of Gawker's books.
At least it's just one game taking liberties with it's layout. Imagine being a NYC native.
Because the "creative side of the industry" exists in the real world and is made up of actual people. Not a convenient assortment of evenly distributed demographics.
BAD: Fanboys are coming out the fucking woodwork again.
You do realize that the story you're referencing uses four males and five females to act as a crutch for it's argument right?
The amount of narcissism in this one post is staggering.
I think you're forgetting that video games in "those days" were considered only for children. The marketing reflected that by appealing to children and parents.