If you have 680K to spend on a TV, perhaps you should rather do something about those kids being prostitutes on streets all over the world to earn tiny amounts of money, instead.
The AI is the achilles heel of Civ-games, and Beyond Earth is no exception. I played one game to the end, and wasn't attacked or threatened in any way all game long. But besides this, I found it really cool and quite enjoyed the visuals.
Wow, for all the early praise it received, the recent Steam reviews for Civ 6 are damning. Only 48% positive reviews and the full first page is all negative reviews for me.
Seems like the most common problems are frustrating AI.
Guess I'll still pass on it until the price drops...
The Last of the Mohicans
[img src="http://images.amcnetworks.com/ifc.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/last-of-mohicans-fix-list.jpg"]
Decent movie. Great soundtrack.
If you had played some other VR games you'd already know that plenty of VR games feel like exercise and make you break a sweat, without needing a fancy treadmill hardware. Simply out of the fact that you are moving around a lot.
Space Pirate Trainer and Thrill of the Fight are two of the more...
Interesting. Too bad it seems to be abandoned. I really like Mount and Blade, but what I think would be way cooler is to have an Elder Scrolls game at the core, with some Mount and Blade injected in it, instead of the other way around.
Morrowind is so beloved because it has the best plot in a very interesting, exotic world. It is probably the most creative Elder Scrolls game of them all, and that also produces huge nostalgia. But I played it "only" two times and after Oblivion and especially Skyrim, it is very hard to go back...
They won't do a Morrowind remaster, but perhaps they would do a Morrowind II.
I would be extremely happy if they moved the Elder Scrolls a tad in a new direction, taking hints from the civil war quest in Skyrim. Imagine a game world from Skyrim to the Summerset Isles with Hammerfell in...
Crytek has always been a mystery to me. They came practically out of nowhere, with an AAA game engine that looked better than anything else and founded three studios out of the blue. I always wondered where they got the money to do all that.
I guess their very first games Far Cry and Crysis...
Yes. Almost immediately after posting that, "This War of Mine" came to mind as a good example of a videogame that can actually be considered something of a "tribute" to the victims of war. I guess the difference lies in that Battlefield mainly glorifies war whereas This War of Mine reveals it...
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