Rumours and speculation are abound whether or not the new Xbox will always be online. PSU debates why it makes perfect sense for it to be exactly that, and why it doesn't make sense for Sony to follow in Microsoft's footsteps.
Gary Green said: We’re finding ourselves in a similar position with the Pixel Remaster edition of Final Fantasy IV as we were with Final Fantasy III since, once again, we’ve received a slightly upscaled, more vibrant port of the original game when there’s already an expanded 3D remake available. As such, we’re playing a game which, even after its long-awaited release, still lives very much in the shadow of its remake.
If only they didn't screw ps4 owners over with a physical release. I'd have ran through this in a heartbeat.
The first one I played, it was the one that made me fall in love with JRPGs and is still my favorite to this day. A masterpiece
The Nerd Stash: "The Wasteland is unforgiving, and there are a ton of brutal ways to die in the Fallout universe. We listed out the absolutely worst ones."
While many are fans of the Honkai Star Rail story so far, The Nerd Stash believes that the deaths of Robin and Firefly no longer carry much weight.
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http://narwhaler.com/origin...
Connect it to the Ethernet cable before the power cord cable .
We already have always online consoles, ones which need an internet connection to be fully functional, but its another thing entirely to make no accommodation for when they're offline. To make physical copies of games you buy and even downloaded titles you've supposedly outright bought not work.
The console makers wont force it on us per say, what is going to happen is they might leave it up to developers to implement it if they so choose. Then it'll be up to us the consumers to avoid those games and show developers we aren't buying what they're selling.
I REFUSE to support an always online console or a console that leaves it up to devs to do this.