MMGN.COM writes: oin us as we talk about five games that changed the face of gaming this generation. You may be surprised as to what we've included.
Mojang announced the release date for the latest Game Drop for Minecraft and a significant visual upgrade for the Bedrock Edition.
Today, Mojang revealed the next Game Drop coming soon to its ultra-popular survival crafting game Minecraft, titled "Chase the Sky."
Does anyone think it’s a little lazy of them to use a Ghast rather than make a new Hot air balloon skin or something.
A whole update for this is wild after months of waiting
Chicken jockeys, ghosts of Saquon, and shirtless coaches in LA's Minecraft-made video
I quit watching the NFL. I used to be a hardcore fan my whole life. But after seeing Trump commercials during the SB, I left and haven't looked back, the same with the UFC. I can't support organizations that hate me and my family. Anyway, before I left, the owner of the Charger's made the them irrelevant by moving them. This decision turned the team into a dime store coffee mug... I would assume they are still irrelevant today.
-_-
This generation really hasn't seen much change. It's been very, very stagnant. I'd have to press my mind to come up with three games that truly effected the industry.
Minecraft brought indie game development into the mainstream. It didn't really change the industry so much as the community, though. Assassin's Creed broke apart the FPS-hegemony and started the reign of the so-called "parkour" style gaming (read: platformers without cartoon characters).
Other than that... what, really? Flower for bringing about the whole vaguely pretentious half-game-half-art pseudo-genre about? Maybe Professor Layton/Phoenix Wright for reviving the Adventure genre, but that's more a last-gen thing.