In a very special episode of Sophist Radio, the crew does their best to imagine the last moments of a rapping and wrestling icon. The guys begin with a deconstruction of Aaron's hobbies and taste in women, then -- after a small fashion debate -- the crew dives head first into the games they've been playing over the past two weeks. James and Aaron talk about an indie title called 1916 - Der Unbekannte Krieg, and the crew cover the original Halo, Witcher 2, and The First Templar as well. All that and the usual tomfoolery and bad jokes you would expect from your friends here on Sophist Radio.
BLG writes, "Some of the most popular games have had a rough start, with some of them being downright unplayable.
Despite that, developers have managed to turn it around for them and make their game worth playing. Here are some games that had a rough start but were pretty great."
Sea of Thieves... I'm not disagreeing that the game has improved in terms of content. But I feel that the most significant change between now and its release is actually the public perception. Nowadays, most people are aware that the game is a multiplayer PvP-focused experience first and foremost, and not "Black Flag made by Rare". Consequently, people dismissing the whole experience because the single-player aspect is lacking or the story is plain are much less common.
Days gone! By the end of the game I couldn't drop it down! I went around so many hours killing zombies! It was addictive by the end.
The Fallout Anthology Edition is coming to PC very soon, and is packaged with some very S.P.E.C.I.A.L. bonuses.
It’s an awful downgrade to the last one they did
They included physical disc back then
I would love the classic fallout games on console. Closest I could find was atom rpg, I liked that one a lot
Getting free games is never a bad thing and Amazon Luna has new offerings for Fallout fans looking for free adventures in the Wasteland.