Also, the game is extremely repetitive because it was designed to be played in small chunks (and obviously save on development resources)
And the movie version is not optimal because it skips all of the best scenes and character development to just cover the highlights.
Posts by Jason Roof
Playing 358/2 before 2 is weird. The game released after and is meant to play on your familiarity with the organization.
Pulling this off with 18 seconds left on the clock was so unbelievably hype.
I don't even understand how you could pull this off after sprinting 25 yards back with less than a second to turn around and make the pass.
In 2026 wizzy is looking for video editing work!
I can do video essays, shorts, narration, podcasts, audio mixing, talking head video and more. While most of my experience is in gaming I'm open to anything. My style is detail oriented to let the voice of a piece sing without distraction.
Super excited for the combat in Marvel's Wolverine
youtu.be/nGHOM44iNx8?...
Modern CPUs haven't caught up to the cell processor, so it'd probably require a large workstation to run properly
Masterful Gambit, Sir
I tried to replay it a few years ago, thought it a good idea to rest the bongo on my lap, and was incapacitated 3 seconds into level 1
indies definitely picked up the slack after most studios stopped bothering with small scale projects, but DS games had so many system exclusive features (stylus, dual screen, mic, vertical mode) that encouraged experimentation with control and visual stylization to avoid comparisons with PSP titles
Guns :/
Good shit, wish I wasn't stuck at work all weekend.
We need reparations
Really enjoying this A side B side system of switching between Kingdom Come and Dragon's Crown.
Beyond the medieval flavor, these are so drastically different in gameplay, art, and their approach to history vs fantasy.
They're perfect compliments to each other because they satisfy different wants
I felt more accomplished finding a bath house and doing laundry in Kingdom Come than anything I've played from a Bethesda RPG.
Limiting manual saves to an expendable resource really clicks all of the deep mechanics into place. It's great at incentivizing players to engage with its many systems
Right after the dud, and right before possibly the most carbon datiest episode from the classic run
How it must feel to be a halfway competent politician watching the president rant about stuff he saw on TikTok
youtu.be/0uqGKCDV1j8?...
Dragon's Crown is very fun, and also has the uncanny ability to put the largest milkers on screen anytime my wife passes by. 10/10
Still blows my mind how Sony could've greenlit a new sequel to basically every franchise owned by Japan Studios, and it still would've cost them less than a single Concord.
Before last year, my opinion on game streaming was very negative.
But I prefer playling PC games away from a desk, and during Christmas out of town, booting up Slay the Spire for short chunks at night was lovely.
Ideally I'd use my big OLED, but the cats aggressively scratch at any lit pixel
I did a lot of testing over the holidays, and with high quality Lan cables, a phone with wifi 6, and the correct settings, you can get picture quality and responsiveness that feels like playing a portable PS4.
Psychonauts 2 felt so good on remote play, the reaction from others was "what the hell?"
To my phone with a Backbone attached. Sony's default streaming app is mediocre, but there's a fan developed one that let's you modify a bunch of settings.
My phone has a 6.8 inch screen, so with 16:9 content, it's roughly in-between the size of a switch lite and standard switch.
It genuinely felt impossible until I fixed a few settings in the PXPlay App, but I feel like I died enough on the final stage near the very end that I could beat it another 10 times with little issue.
This is why I've only turned on the TV twice the past 30 days.
Regret booting up Astro's Playroom for the 4 hidden bots, but everything else was excellent. Beating the Final Master Onion stage on streaming was a real challenge.
There's thousands of games out there, most of which are at bargain sale prices or only obtainable with a quick download.
I got the entire mass effect trilogy for $5. Dragon's crown for $2. Golf Story and Kotor for free.
I don't think I've enjoyed a single game I've power through to hit credits.
No matter how far (or short) into a game I am, the moment the core experience starts to feel mundane, I'll shelve it.
I'm only now picking Astro Bot up after playing it on release, and it feels special again.
I have so many games that I've been chipping away at for half a decade or more.
Apparently I went there over six years ago ๐
That and the Ghibli Museum in Tokyo are places where I was captivated by every single display.
There's a beauty in seeing some of the older methods (either due to technology, software, or trends) that were implemented in the creative process.
I remember seeing the Col-R-Tel method of using a pinwheel to simulate color on monochromatic tube TVs while at New York media museum, and it's nuts
Every time I see this card, this scene immediately pops in my head
Not even potential for a catchy abbreviation.
I'm incredibly moronic when it comes to remembering names, but I've called it everything from Interstellar: Heretic Prophecy to The indigo Profit.