
Oh I have played Journey. I got it on the PS3. It didn't blow me away or anything, but I'm glad I got to experience it, if that makes any sense. With or without arms, I still say the main character looks like a walking ketchup bottle.
Oh I have played Journey. I got it on the PS3. It didn't blow me away or anything, but I'm glad I got to experience it, if that makes any sense. With or without arms, I still say the main character looks like a walking ketchup bottle.
When I reviewed the LEGO Ninjago movie game, they sent me movie tickets. I guess they figured I wouldn't pay to see it. :)
My impressions of Journey is that you're a walking ketchup bottle in the desert.
The TellTale Back to the Future game is probably the closest thing we'll get to Back to the Future 4.
I played Xenogears back when I was in college. It was kind of neat at first and I liked that Lucca from Chrono Trigger made a cameo appearance (many of the same team members worked on both games). But I got to one part of the game where you sift through an hour of text, fight a hard battle, and then sift through another hour of text without stopping to save. And I said "Forget this, I don't have time for this, I'm a busy college student." And I stopped playing it. Plus it was getting pretty depressing. I was beginning to lose faith in Square, but luckily their next game cheered me up. And that game was Brave Fencer Musashi! If you've never played it, I hope you get to someday!
The remaster is very good. I got it for Christmas last year. The graphics on it are incredible.
I looked up a video on that Game Boy Ren and Stimpy game. The graphics are really good, as I remember, but the platforming just seems so generic. Definitely a quick cash grab for THQ.
I got the Namco Museum Archives vol. 1 and 2. I should've waited for a sale, but I have a weakness for classic Namco stuff. Vol. 1 has an 8-bit demake of Pac-Man Championship Edition, which is cool. And vol. 2 has FREAKING MAPPYLAND! I loved that NES game. I'll write a blog about both volumes sometime in July.
I reviewed Totally Reliable Delivery Service. It wasn't very good on mobile.
I liked New Super Lucky's Tale on Switch.
I never could get into Crash games. I'm not a big fan of 'one hit and you die' games, especially in 3-D, and it didn't really do anything better than Donkey Kong Country or Super Mario 64 did. Only Crash game I really liked was Crash Team Racing. It rivaled Mario Kart in some aspects.
I was almost finished with high school in 1994 (graduated in 1995).
I remember seeing The Tick comic books and watching the Saturday morning cartoon a few times. It was funny, but I couldn't get into it like I could Sam & Max. That's a comic I highly recommend for you, and it even had a Saturday morning cartoon, too! TellTale made some great games about it, too! The guy who created Sam & Max now works at PIXAR!
While I think that Donkey Kong Country is SLIGHTLY overrated, I still think it's a GREAT platformer. I like that it's tough, but not too tough, like the most recent DKC games were. I can beat DKC, but not DKC Returns or Tropical Freeze. I got DKC that year for Christmas. It still amazes me to this day that the underwater music is coming from a SNES!
One of my top five favorite games of all time came out in 1994: Final Fantasy 3! (or 6). If i could ever get you to play that game someday, oh man that would be cool!
I've noticed that Japanese games with trophies are less creative or fun to get. Or they're a lot harder or less frequent.
I've noticed that for the most part, Western game developers have a better idea of fun trophies and achievements to get over developers from Japan, so that may explain why Contra ones aren't so accessible to get.