When they don't charge $70 for a free to play game model.
It definitely is when they limit the money sent to just one game.
Personally I used to buy Call of Duty and Battlefield every year since 2010 but the past year I finally stopped. They are both definitely taking inspiration from Fortnite and I'm just not into it. The only reason it took so long for me to stop buying Call of Duty is the zombies mode but that's finally just so terrible I don't feel the need to buy just for it anymore.
"Carbon negative, water positive and zero waste by 2030"
So they're exiting the hardware business?
Only took mine 4 months but the second controller I bought has been going 7 months now without issue but I haven't exclusively used only it.
The joysticks they both use are the cheapest design money can buy, only Dreamcast had a design that wouldn't get stick drift.
No they are not repairing them for free, I had to pay $10 to ship it to them while Nintendo gave me a shipping label for free.
They still haven't fixed the disc error issue on boot when the camera and a usb drive is plugged into the back at the same time.
A 10 is a senseless review because no game is perfect.
You don't own digital products, you rent them. It's as simple as that although on PC in the past decade I don't think physical games have been usable without using the drm called steam, making them pointless.
Personally I'm never giving up my ownership rights to the games I buy. It's the same reason I didn't buy the Oculus Quest 2, one wrong move on Facebook and all your purchases go bye bye.
It definitely should be better considering you have to pay $500 alone just for those graphics. But I'm not discussing the experience I'm discussing what hardware is in each headset by themselves to guess the price. If the Quest 2 didn't have built in hardware like PSVR2 and connected to a PC via wire only it would be a sub $200 device to manufacture.
The PSVR2 headset has no graphics capabilities since it lacks a CPU and GPU which means it's acting more like a screen for your console which even the Quest 2 can do wireless or wired to a PC. The Quest 2 has the console built in with a Snapdragon XR2 chipset (more powerful than a Nintendo Switch), 6GB ram, 128GB storage, Wifi, Bluetooth, Heatsink w/ Fan, 2 Speakers, and a Battery. The PSVR2 has none of that but has rumble motors, better screen, better head strap, and 2 extra IR cameras f...
Does Valve allow any competing launcher on the Steam Deck? Unless the question is asking for GOG to release a Linux version of GOG Galaxy.
When I had a Switch it never left the side of my TV and when I played games on it I would focus on one game for a few sessions until I was ready to move onto another. I don't understand the crowd that is playing multiple games in a session unless your playing small VR games which isn't a problem on the Switch.
I'm just waiting on a physical release to pick it up.
That's the way I felt also but maybe I'm just too old for this stuff (I am still in my 20's though).
You couldn't pay me to ever play another Halo, Forza or Gears. Those games were so uninteresting last gen for me I don't know if I will ever get another Xbox (sold my One X) even though I prefer their controller and console features over my PS5. I actually bought a Xbox One even though I already had a PS4 expecting Scalebound and Sea of Thieves to be amazing and we all know how that turned out.
If we are talking about PC sure but with console hardware being locked down we need a large player base to keep the publishers interested which keeps the games flowing in or we will have another Vita or Wii U on our hands and I don't want anything to do with those type of situations ever again.
That's what it says but I have a feeling that's incorrect and this collection of classic games will be identical to what's on PS Now currently with very few PS2 games available for download, the rest being streamed.