Suddenly all the cutesy indie life sims with fishing minigames don’t seem so wholesome any more
MurrayL
Have you tried Blue Prince?
I’m sure there are lots of examples for me, but I guess one that comes to mind is 007: The World Is Not Enough for PS1.
Reading/hearing about it as an adult, not only is it seen as a poor follow up to Goldeneye, but also the PS1 version is the worse of the two releases, with the general consensus being that the N64 version is better.
Back in the day, though, I didn’t know any better and I loved it. I expect most people have games like that.
To be replaced with what? SNW was (is, for the time being) a great show and the torchbearer of the franchise IMO. For a time it looked like Paramount was finally righting the ship with SNW and LD, but now they’re both gone and they’re back to putting out dross like Section 31?
This article is about 20 years old - it’s a geocities archive. Why it got reposted now, other than to start some pointless internet arguments, is anybody’s guess.
the programme, aimed at 7–14 year olds, is “designed to spark wonder for science and the future of energy”. It includes a game, in which players attempt to build a city that survives until the year 2050, and in-school education materials to “showcase how modern cities use energy resources and the ways the energy transition can be managed”
I think people are forgetting just how tiny the Switch launch lineup was.
- 1-2-Switch
- Breath of the Wild
- Snipperclips
That was about it. There was a reason eshop shovelware title Vroom in the Night Sky somehow got tons of coverage from major outlets and gaming YouTubers: there was almost literally nothing else to play for weeks.
Yes, same as in the original release.
I’d say the only caveat is that I would not recommend multiplayer for a first-time playthrough. It completely undercuts the tension and horror aspects and turns the game into a comedy. Still fun, but absolutely not the intended experience, so it’s better saved for a second run through (IMO).
Congrats on missing the point and making it about yourself instead
Interesting how they continue to blame the pirates, devices, DRM, and everything else they can think of, but never the fact that content is getting spread across more and more services and prices keep going up.
Their greed in chasing profits is fuelling the very problem they’re trying to fight.
The cat hair moustache puzzle in Gabriel Knight 3 is pretty infamous, for good reason.
$50 for an app to generate random maths problems?! I’m at a loss for words