I prefer the second game. I think the biggest criticism of the second game - abandoning the Pokémon model - is its biggest advantage.
But Pokémon fans can be expected to try to ruin things that look or stop looking like their little game.
It's not true. Ubisoft supports all new platforms. They even supported Wii U at lauch with exclusives such as Zombi U.
Being a frontrunner at something Google is doing is smart.
Graphics are the result of newer technology. They allow not only more details but new ways to play. 3D games made Zelda OotT and Gran Turismo possible. This gen allowed The Witcher 3.
Powerful hardware extends The boundaries of play.
But a remaster of a short 90s game is the pinacle of ambition. Gamerzz....
Nice.
Cool.
Nintendo fans are like Apple fans. They dont care about price and if something is 4 years old tech. They only care if that thing is new in Nintendo bubble.
Do you know something that always catches my attention in these articles about "what happened to ___________?"
Never ask that about Nintendo series. Zelda takes 6 years to come out with a new game, Mario another 5, Metroid over 10, but now if Sony, Ubisoft, Microsoft, Capcom or any other gives more than 2 years off for a franchise, it's the end of the world. .
We already have it.
This is the kind of game that people say they like it and want it, but it's hard to believe. I played those three games back in PS3, and they are good fps for their time. But nothing more.
Remastering them should not be the priority of Sony and even less for Insomniac. If some obscure studio want to do this and Sony wants to make a little bit about a average franchise and a nonexistent nostalgia, go on. Don't count on me.
Our memory is very selective. It remembers good or striking things and excludes negative experiences. Music, movies and games work the same way.
It turns out that a lot of adults with some money want to try to revive their childhood and youth. They listen to the same songs and go to shows by old artists. They are waiting for Matrix 4. And they want to play the games that were played on a lazy late 90's.
However, it is all an illusion. A trick of our m...
I'm pretty sure those games will be $50 each when they hit Switch.
That is exactly my point. Negative opinions and criticisms related to Nintendo are buried under the discourse of fanatic nintendism.
Those who had constructive opinions about Zelda's emptiness were struck down negatively and mental gymnastics were done to get around the problem. The same thing is happening with Switch hardware problems. Many will deny the problem and others will say it is a good thing.
I understand the argument, but it's impossible to a Nintendo related problem to become a major topic.
Nintendo fans are passionate and vocalic for good and for bad. Even if all Switches stop working right now they will say that's a good thing. Something in the line: "Nintendo is giving us the opportunity to buy a new Switch", "I was already planning to buy the new version witch better battery" and so on.
When Zelda BotW came o...
Is it, though? Creating a regulation about something means normalizing it. There will be a footnote stating the odds, but nothing beyond that. In fact, lootboxes can come out in the sun without any shame once and for all.
When regulators demanded the creation of ESRB on behalf of Mortal Kombat and Night Trap, they thought it would slow production of violent games. In the end, there was an explosion of these games as publishers were able to protect themselves by the age stam...
The problem is not the games themselves. The problem is the lifestyle that hateful people lead. And in this, the "gamer" is usually an isolated person, bombarded by targeted content and with a very low sense of reality.
A shooter being a gamer is not a product of games, but the lifestyle and isolation that games provide are crucial factors for mental and moral illness.
I am really interested to see how young Trump supporters, who are overwhelmingly gamers, will try to minimize this conflict.
This kind of intellectual gymnastics entertains me.
Tomorrow is my turn to write a hyperbolic article about Nintendo.
I can't say it's a bad offer but the end is near.