It had to be Finding Nemo for Gamecube. The title is pretty self explanatory: you want to find Nemo because watching all those eternal loading screens constitute 90% of the game.
I'd have to say it's The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. Its main advantage is having mod support. Having such an active and talented modding community makes this game fit my definition of a perfect, in the sense that it has two main qualities: it gives you absolute freedom of doing virtually anything you want and it becomes endless. The fact that the base game already gives you an engaging story, sophisticated characters, an incredible lore and, in my opinion, the most interactive open worl...
My first video game that got me into gaming was Super Smash Bros. for my N64. Despite that I had inmmense ear pain that day, I remember that the flashy colors, characters and the overall aesthetic made me forget about the pain. Since then, I can't remember a single weekend which I didn't aspire to play video games.
I have a sincere question (no trolling purposes): Are there any minimum grammar and/or sintaxis criteria that the authors of these "articles, blogs, posts" have to meet in order to submit their work? Its not to offend or troll the writer of this particular post, but it is quite evident that the written structure of this text is just awful (sentence structure, punctuation, etc.). I sincerely wanted to know because, if there is no criteria and everything that matters for a text to be ...
I am pretty sure western rpgs have a lot of potential. Don't get me wrong; I love the Witcher series, Skyrim, Dragon Age and the like, but I just feel like these games could be such more if the just emphasized the story and gameplay elements more: characetrs relationships with other npc's, meaningful chocies (with real consequences), more freedom on weapon use and customization. Finally, I just wish more studios would consider making rpg's with 16th to 18th century settings; it ju...