
Thirteen was not, in fact, lucky number thirteen. Or maybe it was? In this episode, we discuss:
PS1 games we kind of remember, Fail in February, Metal Gear Skrillex, Tomb Raider, trippin’ down to ‘Bama, social media in gaming, the Select button, when Microsoft will announce the “NextBox," GranTurismo and Drive Club, more PlayStation 4 (will it never cease?), Assassin’s Creed IV: Black Flack like the band, video game reality shows, our new Pokemon podcast (no…really), and Super GeekTi.me
It’s hard to tell if we’re getting better or worse, isn’t it? Oh well. Hope you enjoyed. See you for the next one.
(Oh and we have another behind the scene bonus thing at the end. Those are fun.)

In this day and age, it’s rare we experience a warm fuzzy feeling when we boot up X (formerly known as Twitter, of course).
But the past few days have been lovely: our feed is full of people talking about DriveClub again.
The discussion started when someone posted a clip of the game and its infamous rain effects. The caption reads: “Still can’t believe this is a 12 year old game.”
This was one I was hoping would have some kind of boost from the PS5. The devs locked that sucker so tight...
I play the PSVR one even though it doesn't look as good, because that one is 60fps.
If they were to release that game on the PlayStation 5, there would be absolutely no need for a remaster or a remake. The whole appeal of the original game was that it consistently exceeded people's expectations.
Sony should reassemble the team and make Driveclub 2. Driveclub was so ahead of its time it’s crazy.
This is what I hate about gamers sometimes
There is a segment of gaming communities that always want an old game to come back. But when the game(s) were in their prime, nobody supported them or not enough people supported them. Driveclub, Killzone, Resistance, etc all fit that profile.
I want Driveclub, Killzone, Resistence, and etc all back too. But I say that as someone that bought into, played, and own those games.
Too many people like to talk but not put up the money to support when it's needed. I even lump two of my own personal friends into that. I remember how one of them constantly said "I always wanted to play the Resistance games", yet never made an effort to buy any of them. No way that's an isolated event.
I think the original Motorstorm was the game that convinced me to buy a ps3. Way ahead of its time.

In my Tomb Raider iOS review, I look at whether or not the game runs well enough on mobile to justify parting with your cash.

The new Tomb Raider game shares the same “universe” as the live-action Amazon Prime series starring Sophie Turner as Lara Croft.
how the tables have turned, went from making a movie about a game to making a game about a movie/show