That looks like a fun Jellyfish Game.
This has become an unfortunate trend with publishers than I am not a fan of.
Interesting piece and the points you made were quite nice. Good job on this article.
What an interesting game, thank you for spotlighting this, you've peaked my interest.
It's almost like people miss the Top Down RPGs with good stories and want to play more of them! But no that can't be it.
From the first hour of Gameplay, Berseria looks quite good. Thank you for showing us this.
You are right on that, but I wouldn't shut down the possibility just yet.
Nintendo always seems to be willing to shut even mods down at the slightest provocation.
Well, this looks promising.
There's an extended cut? Is it ever going to come to the PC?
What an interesting sounding game, thanks for bringing attention to it.
Considering the fact that this is the exact thing that the writer is saying in the article to not advertise fan groups unless you ask to be advertised and that the writer themselves mentioned they were also a fan of Pokemon Uranium, playing it for several years, as well as mentioning several other fan projects that they may very well have ben a fan of prior to a shutdown. Could it be that by making a post like this addressed to other game journalists, they may have been trying to make an open...
It was able to be downloaded for years prior, the beta and alpha versions of the game weren't private downloads, they were public. Forums were also public.Kotaku had even reported on this project being in the works prior to this, 2 years ago and since nobody dog piled on it, still nothing happened to it. Nintendo didn't do anything, they smothered countless other projects long before they got out of Alpha and Beta stages. They would even kill smaller projects like the Bulbasaur Plant...
Here's when things get interesting, Kotaku had actually made an article about the beta of the game years ago. Which technically gave it's first bits of exposure, but nothing came of it because no one else reported it at the same time. It was just this dogpiling that seemed to ramp up the SEO
The author isn't saying that the game will stay a perfect secret game forever. Just a matter of extending the life span a little more.
Thank you for stating what you did though, gives the author an idea of just what to add to the article.
9 years it didn't and then within a span of 24 hours, Kotaku and Polygon, the sites with the highest SEO in the industry, wrote an article on it, only for dozens of articles to follow suit.
No, you should be fine.
They finally removed the one stop at Auschwitz so there's at least one step in the right direction.
Thank you for providing this insight into the issue, while doing research for this article I was wondering how long it'd take for someone who lived in the town to stumble across the article if they ever did, but I'm glad to have a locals thoughts on it.
It is a crime that the king of the Laguz is not in Fire Emblem not an actual crime but still. Such wasted potential.