"Through the medium of gaming, publishers like to not only tell a wide variety of stories, but also provide a wide variety of experiences for the user to participate in. Many times, these are epic adventures, engrossing narratives, and powerful games that leave you wanting more.
But what if you want to pretend that you’re an octopus who is pretending to be a married man with kids?
This week, I’m going to give you a look at a pair of games that don’t really deliver a narrative but deliver a very strange experience that will leave you wondering what the heck it was you just played." - Steve Perry
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.
I want a noby noby girl this time.