Four Horsemen will not likely ever be featured in a game, much like many of the tracks on Kill 'em All. Four Horsemen was written by Dave Mustaine. Working out the license agreement is a lot more work and money than a single track is worth to any game dev.
The same issue is a common problem among a lot of old music by separated bands. Usually one dick member refuses to sign over the rights (Axl), or worse.. their damn wife (Yoko).
I'm sure it's due to licensing battles within the band. I recall Axl making a stink over Slash' involvement in GH3, particularly regarding the use of Welcome to the Jungle.
Personally I'm holding out for a Rush based music game. With the introduction of the keyboard to RB, seems like the perfect time. Although Warriors of Rock having secured the rights to 2112 (if exclusive) would be a crushing blow to the concept.
Who didn't know that TC Carson was Kratos?
They didn't confirm anything. Cloud computing is a vague concept with a wide range of possible application.
Remote Play is cloud computing.
It's hard to sympathize with some people who feel they've been lied to when they put words in other people's mouths.
If it deserved my money, it would have it.
The end-all, be-all of my money is me. I'll decide who deserves it*. Thanks.
*after the government takes their share.
It affects us all. That is why I have no tolerance for it.
I don't think random travelers are a bad thing. I think the option of friendly travelers is a good thing.
I don't understand the design philosophy of limiting choice where irrelevant.
I guess the example he gave of walking with your grandmother was a fallacy.
My question is not can Xbox handle it, that's a dumb question.
My question is how will Xbox handle the online features?
They'd be hard pressed to market that. You just described the PS3.
@WhiteNoise
Not all revolutions in gaming are technological.
I'd bet my ass that it will be something camera based.
And it will be HD, more online compatible etc. All the basics we expect from 21st century technology.
I don't know how anyone disagreed with that.
The point of the comment is I DON'T KNOW!
I DON'T KNOW! I DON'T KNOW I DON'T KNOW!
I can't make it any clearer than that.
If that's the case, I must respectfully decline. My patience is finite.
Because that entire market already has a Wii and Nintendo will be hard-pressed to convince them to buy another $300 box when, all things considered, they've barely used the first one.
The big question mark that people miss is that nobody knows how this market will follow along. This is really the first time they've jumped into gaming at all. Who knows if they'll hop on the treadmill as we do. Have we not established already that our audiences differ significantly...
Is this now OP4G.com?
I don't remember coming to Opinion Pieces 4 Gamers.
The human eye is easily capable of resolving over 300 pixels per inch. The iPhone 4's retina display accomplishes this, but you pay for it. (Or it's subsidized.)
In motion, resolution starts to matter a little less but then refresh rate comes into question. A low refresh rate will kill clarity, no matter how many pixels are there.
Ideally, we want big, sharp and clear. And of course we want it to be cheap. There lies the ultimate compromise. Just how...
I maintain that Nomura is the only inspired designer left at Square-Enix.
I also maintain that's because they refuse to let new blood try things out in Japan, as is common place everywhere else.
I just beat it last week. Amazing. AMAZING!
I played the first one.. was really cool to it. Dug the characterization and the story but the gameplay was lacking. But they totally nailed it this time around. I had to go back and slug through the first one. I am now a fan and eagerly awaiting the next. Wish I hadn't waited for the PS3 version, but it may genuinely be the tightest version of the game. It may have been for the best.
I was thrilled to hear it w...