For anyone who hasn’t gotten around to one of the decade’s best games yet because it was on an annoying storefront:
For anyone who hasn’t gotten around to one of the decade’s best games yet because it was on an annoying storefront:
“new super mario bros.” as a game title reminds me of being too embarrassed to say like really bizarre movie sequel / franchise titles.
like lmao this fucker said ‘one for “spider-man: far from home” please.’ it’s just spider-man. no one is going to be confused about what movie you want, there’s only one.
I remembered the Nichijou coffee shop when u_u mentioned that but had forgotten there was another vignette that was even more exactly that!
i wish more games used gaiden or sidestory in the title.
my favorite instance of this is one of the ff7 spinoff novels having the japanese title Final Fantasy VII Lateral Biography TURKS -The Kids Are Alright-, “lateral biography” presumably being a thesaurusification of “side story”
On the Last Bible OST released by SuperSweep, it has Megami Tensei Gaiden: Last Bible translated on the side as “A legend of outside that a goddess rebear”.
What I would love is an RPGMaker that lets you modify the battle system a bit easier so you can have a press-turn battle system. As far as I know, somebody has only made something like this possible for VX Ace, which is why I’m still using VX Ace.
oh shit it me
holy f Outer Wilds is available on Steam right now!
I know, I mean it already exists for VX Ace, which is why I’m using it and not the newer RPGMaker.
Oh, I missed that this was ace when I googled it. Apologies.
Deus Ex is one of the most revered games in history, featured on many “best games of all time” lists. It broke new ground with player choice and depth of story for a first-person experience. And the soundtrack, which establishes a unique, futuristic gritty atmosphere, is highly regarded to this day.
Now, two of the original composers, Alexander Brandon and Michiel van den Bos, have returned to the soundtrack they first wrote 20 years ago. In revisiting some of the game’s most iconic themes, they have decided to keep some tracks true to the original, touched up using modern production techniques; other tracks are fully reimagined and will give even dedicated fans something new to listen to. It’s a celebration of two decades of Deus Ex and a “thank you” to the fans who have kept their love for the game alive over the years.
this is grim
Watching EA is always like defecating in reverse.