It was years of sparse support and some of the worst game droughts a Nintendo console has ever seen. They shifted to a budget development model and thanks to that, we got game droughts AND games that spent the minimum time being developed (and it often showed in depth and content volume). There are some good games on the Wii U, sure, but it's almost entirely the same series as always with Splatoon being the only noteworthy new IP, while Zelda got delayed to hell just so it could land on t...
When I started the demo last night, I hadn't been paying attention to the screen drift and was wondering why it looked like I was aiming my guns with broken wrists while using the Move controllers as my left hand kept disappearing. It frustrated me until I realized the issue, fixed it, and found out the Move tracking was actually really good.
I tried the demo last night, and I gotta say, they nailed the rail shooter. It's fun to play, freaky to experience, and well polished. Easily one of the best launch titles on the PSVR.
It made me motion sick when I tried it today. It also made my roommate motion sick. It wasn't bad racing, but the experience needs patches bad to be more friendly.
Best information ever! I was already getting frustrated that my Gamestop order status hadn't changed at all. It was an absolute fight just to update my mailing address since I happened to have had to move in the past seven months since my initial pre-order. Considering it was going to cost me $10 just to see my PSVR sometime next week, I wasn't exactly happy. I just cancelled that order and confirmed an order of the launch bundle with Amazon though, which is what I wanted originally m...
You can save the demo at the banner you first set down to establish your basic town.
Dynamic IP, proxies, and proxy browsers are incredibly easy ways to get around an IP ban anywhere. I remember one game I used to play IP banned me when I was younger, but one reset of my modem and I was cycled a new IP that could get in fine. I also had a browser that could get around the firewall in high school so that I could browse the internet freely whenever I had a computer handy. IP bans are less effective than ever before.
This is great if you want to gift games, as well as if you don't trust Sony with your card information. You can funnel your money through a third party and bypass any risk you may feel is involved with entering your card information on the PS Store, without having to go through the roundabout method of buying a gift card code, entering that, then buying the game all across the kind of cumbersome to navigate PS Store.
The one thing I've always hated about Symmetra is the turret spam. It would be okay if they only slowed down, but I swear, I've died to walls of Symmetra turrets almost as much as actual people during my time with the game. Not them slowing me down and me getting shot, but them outright killing me through sheer damage. Maybe they damage with the intent to be spread out across multiple doorways and other environments, but nobody has ever played Symmetra that way. They should be better ...
What an amazing article! That 404 error taking up the whole page just gives me a warm fuzzy feeling.
It's not about whether a delayed game will be good or not. Like I said, I want games to feel polished and complete on day one, preferably without a multi-GB patch being necessary. It's how delaying a game has come to be viewed as just another part of the public side of game development, and how problematic that is when maintaining a publicly announced release schedule should be the normal expectation.
Especially as I've started taking part in the more ill advise...
Yooka-Laylee is my pick for sure. It is the only game I've backed on Kickstarter to date, and it is everything I hoped it would be and more. The developers are truly following through, and the Toybox showed a lot of promise. The recent gameplay videos make me even more confident that a stellar, nostalgic experience is on the horizon.
It becomes a problem of inconvenience if you have a lot of digital purchases, demos, betas, apps, etc. Not being able to remove items is still a downer, but being able to organize around the issue is relatively convenient. I never saw the need for them awhile ago either, but recently I'm really understanding the clutter of more than a couple dozen purchases with the UI.
This played at the end of the latest episode of Tales of Zestiria the X. A nice little Berseria arc popped in for two episodes to promote the game, and we got the opening as a sendoff. Based on what I saw, I'm looking forward to the release in 2017.
Should I submit this numbered list to the site that someone put together in five minutes? (*whisper* the answer is always "no")
@RookPeace: I'm really not sure because I mean, they kinda messed up their initial release. They shoved it on the dying Wii, then put it on the Wii U that never took off. Then they put it on Windows and Android, but Japan doesn't seem to do a lot of dedicated PC gaming and I otherwise can't comment on Android gaming popularity for something as serious as an MMO. I could see the 3DS version otherwise being successful, but with this amount of porting, my immediate conclusion is desp...
But why hype? DQ X even released on the Wii U, as well as the Wii when the system was at the tail end of its life. Not to mention Windows, Android, and now it's also coming to PS4. They're basically just throwing DQ X at everything to try to grab every person who could be even remotely interested which, to me, indicates that the game hasn't been meeting expectations since launch, and they just keep figuring maybe more platforms will mean a longer lasting player increase.
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I'm aware that it stopped working, and it actually worked for about the first week, stopped working moving into the second week, and now it is just gone. Tracking Pokemon isn't even a little bit fun when you're just blindly wandering around neighborhoods and cities hoping that you are actually getting closer to the Pokemon and that the tracker hasn't just lagged behind again, or that the game hasn't just randomly inserted another Pidgey or three right next to you, making i...
"Removed footprints for nearby Pokemon" - I stopped Pokehunting actively literally exclusively because the foot tracker broke. If it's straight up gone now, I guess I'm done with the game.
But not the sequels after that. The first two games are the only ones worth talking about.