What about this one feels silly?
For whatever reason I've never gotten into the Tales series, but I agree. This does look really cool.
I'll admit, when I saw the comparison to Power Rangers, I was skeptical. But the armor looks really cool and GARO sounds interesting enough. So I watch a couple trailers. While it might not be everyone's cup of tea, I was surprised how much fun it looked.
Ha. Seems like a good reason to me. :P
Absolutely. It will be really interesting to see what they add. They mentioned fleshing out Revus more? I think all of Nifleheim needs more attention. Without watching Kingsglaive, its almost like the empire is a total afterthought in the story.
You can debate a lot of things in modern gaming... but hair is looking too good these days. Lara Croft, Luna... heck even Noctis had some gorgeous locks. :P
What I wouldn't give for a Skyrim-esque game in VR... It just seems like there are still a lot of issues to work out for VR itself in order for that to actually be a reality.
I'm all for games having survival elements, but for whatever reason I've never been able to get into games where the sole purpose is to survive. I'm one of those wimps that enjoys Minecraft more in creative mode. :P
I've been excited for this game since the moment they announced it. Loved gwent in Witcher 3, and I can't wait to see for myself all the stuff they've changed for the standalone release. The fact that you can pick from three different cards when you get a card pack sounds awesome.
The first game has always been just one of those titles that got lost in the shuffle for me. But it's hard to ignore all the rave reviews the second one is getting. Might finally have to take the plunge.
Sadly playing video games won't fix anything directly. But it would be cool if it did. We could just start settling disputes with eSports tournaments (until south korea became the leaders of the free world) :P
There are still plenty of games that are pure escapism for those that are looking for it. But if certain developers, like BioWare, are passionate about telling stories that aren't just escapism, they should be free make whatever games they want.
How is there not a political election game, but with a bunch of characters, like Super Smash Bros? Take Civ's government and resource management systems but turn it into campaigning instead of governing, through in a healthy dose of characters from different games, and you've got yourself something interesting. Dangit... now I want this to be a thing.
I'm already getting flashbacks of BioShock. I would flip out if this were true.
But the point is activision is all about the money. And the whole argument of the piece is that consumer demands aren't reflected in how they spend money. Until demands and spending habits manage to line-up, yeah... activision is going to continue to do stuff like this.
No one is being 'forced' to do anything. If you don't want IW, then don't buy it. Period. If enough people don't want it, then Activision will release MW as a standalone, and you can buy it then.
I don't think it's absurd. MW Remastered is DLC. Highly sought after DLC, but still DLC. No one would ever complain about a company wanting you to have the disc in the machine in order to play any other piece of DLC. The only reason this is different is because people want it so badly and are angry that it is part of another game instead of a standalone release.
The complete physical edition launches the same day.
I'm not a huge fan of horror games. But credit where credit is due. Every game aims to create an emotional response, and fear counts as much as anything else. I've never played it, but Cry of Fear definitely sounds interesting.
It started with a female game developer's ex-boyfriend posting false accusations that she slept with a journalist for better review scores. At the same time, two different groups latched on to the story: those looking for greater journalistic integrity in the games industry, and those looking to shame and ridicule female game devs because... reasons? Regardless of anyone's intentions when it started though, the gamergate banner quickly became a vehicle through which anonymous people o...