“I hope they employ a lot of janitors in Japan.”
Logan and Linden take on a Premium Japan Crate courtesy of http://japancrate.com
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“I hope they employ a lot of janitors in Japan.”
Logan and Linden take on a Premium Japan Crate courtesy of http://japancrate.com
Subscribe it up:
Developer: Ready at Dawn
Publisher: Sony Computer Entertainment
Genre: Third-Person Shooter
Players: 1
Console: PS4
Hours Played: ~6 hours
Progress: Completed the game
Some games are hard to review because their entertainment value depends on how much you generally enjoy games of that genre or how creative or invested you’re willing to be. Minecraft, for example, is the only game that some gamers need and they’re happy to spend thousands of hours building 1:1 scale models of the Sistine Chapel, while other gamers (like me) get maybe a half hour of fun from putzing around before they decide they’d rather have a story or some clearer objectives to tackle. The Order: 1886 is not one of those games. Read on to find out what we thought of our short time with the PS4’s big exclusive game for this season.
“Like a billion many more buttons.”
Logan opens up two fancy gaming mice from ROCCAT — reviews coming soon!
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Techland was kind enough to supply us with a pair of review codes for Dying Light on its release day. Since then we’ve been playing hours each day and the end of the game isn’t in sight, so I figured I would do am impressions article to keep you until our more comprehensive review goes live. Read on to discover our impressions roughly halfway through Dying Light.
Developer: Nintendo EAD Tokyo, Grezzo
Publisher: Nintendo
Genre: Adventure
Players: 1
Console: Nintendo 3DS
Hours Played: ~12 hours
In 2000 Nintendo released the original Majora’s Mask as a follow-up to their hugely successful original foray into the third dimension with Zelda, 1998’s Ocarina of Time. To this day those two games still stand in the eyes of many gamers as the magna opera of the Legend of Zelda series, and for very good reason. Majora’s Mask remains the darkest, most emotional and poignant game that Nintendo ever made and stands in stark contrast to the much safer and lighter fare that post-2006 “Grey Logo Nintendo” prefers to release. Such a rare and sentimental game to the Nintendo gaming community deserves an equally stellar update with modern graphics and mechanics, but does Majora’s Mask 3D (MM3D) pay proper tribute to the classic or did it meet with a terrible fate?
Manufacturer: thumbsUp!
Current Retail Price: $27.50 CDN
“No chargey, si chargey”
A review unit of the Power Tap was provided to us by aeropostale.com
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