Nevada Dru from Bits & Pieces spent 10 years meaning to play Enslaved: Odyssey to the West.
From Xfire: "It's not unusual to see the occasional bad PC port, but these ones make the bad PC ports look great in comparison."
To be fair with GTAIV, it was a very CPU bound game, released at a time when the vast majority of PC gamers still believed that the CPU was nearly irrelevant, and that you only needed a good GPU. 95% of "gaming" builds back then were using turds for CPUs.
Joseph, Josh, and Chris go over a striking Sony decision, a Star Wars: Knights of the Republic remake seems to be happening, and local JRPG lover Chris talks about Atelier Firis DX.
Enslaved: Odyssey to the West may be a cult classic now, but it's also a fascinating predecessor to the popular cinematic games of today.
This game deserves a full remake. Good game but could be so much more on modern hardware.
Still a great game a sleeper hit to most people I so want a sequel to this game but I am not holding my breath.
One of the few games that I finished. I have actually finished this game on pc and Xbox.
This is a really good game. It deserved far more respect than it got.
This game is a sleeper hit I enjoyed this game people are missing out on this game I'd say snag it and add it to your collection.
I loved Enslaved!
Probably my favorite title from Ninja Theory. It was a gem and didn't get enough recognition.
I really enjoyed this game. I have a PS4 and Xbox one. And last gen I had a ps3 and 360. And this ran better on the 360. I remember downloading the demo on both systems and then switching between inputs and comparing. Bayonetta was another game that looked and played much better on 360.
Makes you think Xbox really messes up out the gate this gen. Wonder how it would be if the one x was what they launched with. Something more powerful than PS4 and played 4K blu rays and didn’t have non of that always online and Kinect focus but was consumer friendly and with cross by, cross play, gamepass type value and backward compatibility. Just goes to show all those changes they made were the fruits of healthy competition for the consumer.