*Points, nods, weeps.*Simalacrum said:"hey, listen!"
Aside from that...the noise made by Zubat in 1st-gen Pokemon games is definitely looping in my personal Hell.
*Points, nods, weeps.*Simalacrum said:"hey, listen!"
Hahaha! Something similar happened to me, I was in Megaton at that restaurant outside and instead of sitting down in a chair, I stole a cup of noodles ... whole town is like "U BASTARD!"Blueruler182 said:Can't believe nobody's said this yet, but I believe there's a certain cake that's status was questionable for the entirety of a game.
Other than that, Fallout 3. Maybe I just suck at it (probably), but the only time I tried to pick someone's pocket the entire town of megaton decided to chase me into the bar where I swiftly hid at the tip of the stairs with a sledge hammer and wound down the towns numbers over the next two hours.
Thankfully at that point I had a bunch of land mines in my inventory I was saving them up to sell them.DasDestroyer said:The very ending of FO:NV. I died at least 10 times there, before I realized that without a riot shotgun and a warehouse of ammo, I am screwed.
Now that you mention it, I think Super Ghosts and Goblins on the Snes was the same, where you had to complete it twice and with the proper armor at the end.SnootyEnglishman said:Ghosts and Goblins for the NES. In that you had to complete the whole thing twice just to beat the game and even then you had to be wearing specific items and not die once.
I'd also like to nominate Battletoads as well.
Exactly. The game nudges you on the shoulder saying "Hey, do this. It'll be fun", then it scolds you for choosing the wrong option. Reverse freaking psychology I tell you.TU4AR said:You've just purified the whole area. Clean humans can now begin to repopulate. Ghouls, mutants, all the threats to humanity are all wiped out.Zayren said:Siding with the President and using the FEV, you mean? Because the whole point of that is that it would kill every single person who has mutated at all, which is basically everyone non-Enclave. Yeah, that's a little bit evil.
But really, that wasn't what got me. It was just that bullshit fucking speech at the end. "Unfortunately..." No, fuck you game, you don't give me an option then give me shit when I choose to do it. Don't give me that crap, what sort of fucking morality system is this?
That part, also all of the cut scenes. Especially the Russian Roulette and the ending.crimson sickle2 said:Which part trolled you, the part where two armored smiles appear right next to you, from opposite directions and insta-kill any member that isn't the mask.KEM10 said:Haha, ya.Stammer said:(After someone declares war on me) "The AI dislikes you because you're a warmongering menace to the world"
Killer 7. If you don't know what I'm talking about, play it.
yes, that one. Very fun, just now getting into it. But so, freakin' frustrating.InnerRebellion said:The one with Lyn, Hector and Eliwood? If you say yes, I love you.FollowUp said:Chapter 25 of the Gameboy Fire Emblem
Goddamnit.
Seriously, every time I play this chapter someone important dies. One of the main enemy's hit's you FOUR TIMES
well the Broken Steel add on did come along later on there is that... And define 'death' because I didn't have to kill Harold when I stumbled across Oasis..I mean sure he wanted to die but i convinced him to spread his gift across the wastelandChupathingyX said:Fallout 3.
The purifier is full of radiation? Oh well I'll just send in Fawkes, or Charon, or Sergeant RL-3, they're all immune to radiation, so it shouldn't be a problem.
Wait what? I can't send them in? Why?
My destiny? WTF is this, they're immune to radiation why should I or someone else die for no good reason?
Also Harold's death in Fallout 3 was like a troll punching you in the face over and over again considering there is no possible way to save harold no matter what you do.
I second Battletoads for the racing part.SnootyEnglishman said:I'd also like to nominate Battletoads as well.
The fact that Bethesda planted Harold in that very spot and no matter what you do he will never be free, which basically makes him dead and useless. The only way we're ever going to see him again is if we come back to the Capital Wasteland.AgDr_ODST said:well the Broken Steel add on did come along later on there is that... And define 'death' because I didn't have to kill Harold when I stumbled across Oasis..I mean sure he wanted to die but i convinced him to spread his gift across the wastelandChupathingyX said:Fallout 3.
The purifier is full of radiation? Oh well I'll just send in Fawkes, or Charon, or Sergeant RL-3, they're all immune to radiation, so it shouldn't be a problem.
Wait what? I can't send them in? Why?
My destiny? WTF is this, they're immune to radiation why should I or someone else die for no good reason?
Also Harold's death in Fallout 3 was like a troll punching you in the face over and over again considering there is no possible way to save harold no matter what you do.
I've seen a lot of people mentioning the ending to Fallout 3, and the whole Rad-X, radiation suit and whatnot. The part I didn't get when I played it was I finished the game with Fawkes as my companion. He's a fucking Super mutant. Immune to radiation. Super intelligent. Why the hell can't I tell him the code and get him to enter it in?SoranMBane said:Fallout 3's ending:
My character: *Enters the control room after popping Rad-X and putting on the best radiation suit in the game, enters purifier activation code, then keels over dead for no apparent reason*
Me: "... WHUT."