To me, this just shows that publishers have very much disliked working with Valve for years, and have probably been forced into some awful agreements because of the monopoly they pretty much held over the PC gaming platform. It's a better platform for gamers, but they must have really pissed off a bunch of people.
Other than Walmart, and large hardware stores (when building/repairing, you often can't wait or it's not viable to get a hundreds of pounds of wood/other products delivered) show me a retail chain that's doing well right now.
It's actually a very good marketing strategy. Have people in the company that work with social media start rumors or plant ideas of a remake, and study interest in the product. I can guarantee Nintendo has been well aware that people have been discussing and asking for a port of Trilogy, and it will probably happen at some point. I only hope that for digital versions, they include a launcher where you can download the games separately, but that's probably a pipe dream.
This game messed me up.
Persona 5 on Switch would be a great thing for the franchise in general. It's a fantastic game, and more sales and exposure = higher liklihood of a sequel, with a larger budget to boot.
I think there was a point, where they HAD to deliver a product, or else run out of money. The ideas and things they were working on were most likely not able to be implemented in the time they had. It's unfortunate, but at least with the money they've made on the game, they're continuing to update and improve it for free. That definitely does well by the fans of NMS and will do well for the company in the future.
They did do it with the New 3DS already. Super Nintendo games on the VC, Xenoblade and Binding of Isaac were New 3DS compatible only.
Some people didn't grow up playing Castlevania, Contra or Mega Man X and it shows xD
Bloodborne is a brilliant game, but on the base PS4, the framerate chugs so badly at times that it's nausea inducing.
I might get crucified, but Scholar of the First Sin is probably my favorite Souls game. It was the first I played, and it captivated me. I dreamed about that game when I wasn't playing it xD. I dunno, I love them all. Sekiro is a slow burn. Bloodborne got me right from the get go, but it took me a bit to fully grasp what Sekiro was attempting to accomplish. Both amazing games.
Morrowind needs a full remake. Still easily the most imaginative and best written Elder Scrolls game.
Most definitely there will be signifant visual downgrades, but it doesn't really matter. In VR, even Rec Room feels immersive and believable.
FS literally just released a game last week lol.
If your PS4 has never been online, it might be at an exploitable firmware, and valuable to some. Check the firmware without going online and sell it xD
To answer your questions though, when you update, it will automatically update to the newest version. Sometimes newer games will require a particular firmware or above to run, but I don't know if that's all that common on the PS4. For online services, it will be necessary to update.
Because Jed Pressgrove is a pretentious hipster who seems to only like obscure, artsy indie games.
The combat in this game is so damn satisfying. Once it all clicks, and you gain more abilities, this game is like a window where you are one of the most badass ninjas ever. Sekiro is if Tenchu, Ninja Gaiden and Dark Souls had a glorious lovechild.
Sekiro is last any other Souls game. The combat takes awhile to click, but when it does, damn, is it satisfying.
VR is such an amazing and different experience. The more it sells, the more investors will be willing to back bigger games for the platform. It's not going away now.
It's the same thing with Directs. They'll do multiple in a year, and every time people shit on it. Can't make everyone happy. As a VR owner, it's great to see Sony supporting the platform. They probably could have cleared up some mess though, by calling it State of Play: VR Edition.
Please tell me how many people you know who even have optical drives on their computers anymore. Windows hasn't even natively supported DVD playback since before Windows 8. Something like 92 percent of PC games are digital downloads. I would really like to know what choices PC gaming devs and publishers really have when putting their games on the platform. These people know public opinion on the EGS right now, and they're still running from Steam. They also know that signing exclusive...