It's looking very good I think. I just hope there will be plenty of opportunities to score points in hilariously violent ways.
I never played the first Dragon Age either, but due to all the hype and love that has surrounded it I may have to check out the sequel.
I'm really looking forward to it. It's been off of my radar for some reason, but hearing everyone rave about it has really peaked my interest.
Good interview about a very interesting, if slightly disturbing concept.
It's definitely nice to hear some praise for a publisher occasionally. Especially after the recent stirrings from Activision towers that seem to be making the money men happy, but shutting the gamers out.
That looks pretty impressive. I'm intrigued to see what the hell people are going to do when the full version is released.
I'm looking forward to seeing what they'll do outside of Rapture. They've gone in the completely opposite direction, from cramped, air tight corridors, to flying walkways suspended on balloons. Columbia looks like it will offer some fabtastic new gameplay potential.
Look forward to seeing if this years show will top last years.
Sounds interesting. I might go and dig out a few things I will never play again. Think I'll get much for a copy of Ninjabread Man?
As far as Xbox Live pricing is concerned, yeah, people will pay it because there isn't an alternative (if they stick to Xbox) if they want to play their games online. Doesn't mean they aren't entitled to complain. It is a slap accross the face. Unfortunately the forum poo storm of complaints is basically just pissing into the wind.
As far as individual game prices are concerned though, it does bug me that many Lemmings say it's atrocious before mindlessly thro...
Good interview, and on a topic that is certainly a bit tricky. I'm sure plenty of people do care about the horrors of war, but at the same time we all enjoy our comfort electronics as well as the necessary ones.
I've got to say, this makes Gaikai sound pretty impressive, and OnLive look about as fun as athletes foot. I'm hoping it's not just all talk.
I've got to say, I don't think I could disagree with you more, but then again I love PC gaming. When my hands sit in neutral on a keyboard, the fingers on my left hand fall into the WASD claw with my little finger on left shift and thumb on the space bar, with my right hand sitting firmly on my mouse. It just feels like it was made for first person shooters!
Looking forward to see how the new range mechanic works in the game.
Another signature on the form certainly won't hurt. It's quite optimistic hoping that we'll change the minds of these companies though. One day everyone is complaining that games cost too much, and then we strongly disagree about the shortcuts the big companies take to try and cut them down. At least next time someone tells me that they are better because they have a Mac I can tell them that they fund the horrors of war (and then run off before they can tell me I'm doing the s...
Really looking forward to seeing what they do with this. I really liked the concept shown off in the live action trailer, so it'll be interesting to see how it translates to the virtual world.
It's certainly looking very promising from what we've seen at E3. At the moment I'm thinking it may even sneak into they day one purchase category, depending on the price.
To say I'm looking forward to this is an understatement, but I feel that Valves surprise took away from the announcement a bit for me. I was really hoping for something game, rather than platform related. Damn you internet and your infinite hype machine!
I must admit, I never really saw the point of Vita Chambers in the Bioshock games. They might as well be called 'Never Fail Tubes' because that's basically what they act as. It made dieing in the game a pesky annoyance rather than the dire consequence of getting peppered with ammunition and beaten to death with a lead pipe.
Good interview. I need to learn more about Rage tbh. I haven't been following it as much as I probably ought to have done.