I just bought this full price with zero regrets. I encourage any PS4 owner with even a passing interest in puzzle and/or music games to give Tetris Effect a go. An absolutely sublime gaming experience.
That's one swanky piece of kit. I'll take two, please.
@Aspiring
You heard it here first, folks. Greece is a linear place. Film at 11.
Dude... I'm not gonna lie and this is totally off-topic but normally I don't agree with you because you are a little too far into the console war BS. Which is cool, do your thing. But man, I can't say how much of what you said in response to all these homophobes on here has been absolutely awesome. You're doing good work, dude. Keep owning these fools.
I give this trolling attempt a desperate/10.
Finally, Uncharted 4 gets the coveted Jimmy Fallon endorsement. I can't imagine how badly sales would have been without it. As everybody knows, a game just won't sell without his personal seal of approval.
While I have to say that the reviewer is entitled to his opinion, this headline and story seem a little too click-baity. This isn't to say that Uncharted 4 isn't the greatest game of all time; it very well could be. But that's an awful steep hill to climb and to say that this is better than many other, iconic games comes across as hyperbolic.
There are generation-defining games. Games like Super Mario Bros 3, Final Fantasy VII, Skyrim, the list goes on. All of ...
Now Treehouse is emblematic of horrendous localizations? This joke of a website appears to be willfully ignorant of all the great jobs Treehouse has done over the years. Never mind they keep trying to go to the Rapp well as if it somehow bolsters their position. She was in PR, you imbeciles, not in content creation/translation. It's this kind of "games journalism" that gives the rest a bad name.
The big problem with Metacritic is that they use a weighted formula when determining the overall score for a game. This means that one particular website might count for more than another site. Which is bogus on the surface and even worse, Metacritic won't release how they weight anything. That's why I don't trust Metacritic. It's most definitely not objective.
I don't see the problem with the developers decision to do what they want with their game. It's their game and their vision for how they want it to be. People got up in arms about the idea of Dark Souls adding a variable difficulty because they claimed it would compromise From Software's artistic vision. How is this situation any different?
Nothing like a hit piece after the target has been taken down. Seriously, this woman never did anything to deserve what she got. When the idiots that initially wanted her fired for censorship found out that she was in support of their position, they switched gears to say she was a sexual deviant and needed to be fired for that. Which takes some absolutely hilarious mental gymnastics to reconcile with the fact that these morons were upset that there was less sexualization of minors.
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The comparison is implicit in the question about Mt. Everest being 10 feet tall. It's called reading comprehension. You might not have intended for it to be there but it is. But by all means, call people stupid on the Internet.
What's wrong with the idea that someone could enjoy the game on a lower difficulty? Variable difficulty is something that's been one of the great equalizing elements of gaming. There's no easy mode to help a player in a real sport. You either have the physical skill to play or you don't. But with gaming, anyone can jump in and have fun. All of you jagoffs that say it's the equivalent of participation trophies clearly don't know what it's like to have diminished vis...
Are you really going to compare beating a Dark Souls game to climbing Mt. Everest? That's hilarious. And asinine.
Don't listen to this article. If you like JRPGs, the Tales series, or both, and don't already own Vesperia, buy it. You'll be doing yourself a favor. Also, he's full of it when saying that it'll be cheaper on disc. The sale price is about the best you're going to do and that includes the secondary market.
Here's a controversial idea: stop obsessing over trivialities like ARPU,attach rate, hardware sales, etc. Start playing and enjoying your games. These numbers only matter to the corporate bean counters. To the rest of the world, they're essentially meaningless. Get over these petty, catty arguments. We all have a common ground upon which to tread. Let's exult in the current age of gaming, which has brought with it mainstream acceptance and total entertainment dominance. As a group...
Did you just hold up Killzone 2 as an example of an awesome game while calling Zone of the Enders 1 and Mega Man 1 subpar? That's almost hilarious.
How dare you ask for specifics? Don't you know this the Internet? ;)
As you say, it was optional. So taking it out isn't censorship. It most certainly wasn't about "SJW" anything. It was an element of the game that made sense for the culture of Japan. You might have noticed that America and Japan are completely different when it comes to matters of sexuality and its depictions in media. What is acceptable in one area is taboo in another. Nintendo is in the business of reaching as many of the people in either region as possible. By leaving in ...
But if they made the Yoshi games harder, that would be compromising their creative vision for the game. Just like how having a difficulty select in a From Software game would compromise their creative vision. You just have to accept that not every game is going to be for you.