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News with tag Legacy  RSS
Why You Should Buy Rogue Legacy - Podcast Beyond

Added: 02.08.2014 18:00 | 16 views | 0 comments


The Beyond crew talks through why this indie 2D platformer is so charming.

From: feeds.ign.com

PS4 Indie Title Rogue Legacy Could Come to Wii U

Added: 02.08.2014 11:13 | 4 views | 0 comments


"In a recent interview with Teddy Lee of Cellar Door Games, the developer behind Rogue Legacy, Lee commented that it is still quite possible to see Rogue Legacy on Nintendo platforms, albeit it may take a bit of waiting" -- Nintendo Enthusiast.

From: n4g.com

Rogue Legacy Review - Glitch Cat

Added: 01.08.2014 21:22 | 0 views | 0 comments


Glitch Cat - While Rogue Legacy is ultimately repetitive, the randomly-generated dungeon and huge list of traits make each playthrough a fun and addictive challenge. Players will fail again and again as they learn how to approach higher-level areas and deadlier enemies, but theyll love going back over and over again just to see how far they can go with a better character. This game will definitively keep you busy for a good long time.

From: n4g.com

Rogue Legacy Review

Added: 01.08.2014 0:37 | 0 views | 0 comments


What will your children inherit when you die? Your house? Your debts? Your sweet record collection? The PlayStation port of Rogue Legacy has inherited its PC parent's engaging exploration and combat, mixing some of the best elements from games like

Kids, this is why you don't do drugs.

All three PlayStation versions of the game (PS3, PS4 and Vita) are virtually identical, with the Vita version only missing out on one ultimately pointless feature, a trait that induces "random muscle spasms" and makes your controller vibrate. All three are wonderful versions of the game, though the text on the Vita version can be blurry and hard to read at times. They also contain extra content that was added to the PC version after its initial release, including new traits, new rooms, and, most noticeably, remixed versions of the game's bosses that provide a good challenge to anybody who seeks them out. Rogue Legacy supports Sony's cross buy and cross save features, letting you pick up your saved PS4 game on your Vita with relative ease.

It's almost unfair to compare Rogue Legacy to other games that emphasize permanent death. It doesn't have the secrets of Spelunky and it's more predictable than The Binding of Isaac, yet at the end of every game comes a desire to hop right back in, spend your gold on some upgrades and rack up more monster kills, something the game encourages with a challenging new-game-plus option that appears after the credits roll. Whether you play it on your home console or on the go, it's worth exploring Rogue Legacy's castle again and again and again.

From: www.gamespot.com

Rogue Legacy Review

Added: 01.08.2014 0:37 | 0 views | 0 comments


What will your children inherit when you die? Your house? Your debts? Your sweet record collection? The PlayStation port of Rogue Legacy has inherited its PC parent's engaging exploration and combat, mixing some of the best elements from games like

Kids, this is why you don't do drugs.

All three PlayStation versions of the game (PS3, PS4 and Vita) are virtually identical, with the Vita version only missing out on one ultimately pointless feature, a trait that induces "random muscle spasms" and makes your controller vibrate. All three are wonderful versions of the game, though the text on the Vita version can be blurry and hard to read at times. They also contain extra content that was added to the PC version after its initial release, including new traits, new rooms, and, most noticeably, remixed versions of the game's bosses that provide a good challenge to anybody who seeks them out. Rogue Legacy supports Sony's cross buy and cross save features, letting you pick up your saved PS4 game on your Vita with relative ease.

It's almost unfair to compare Rogue Legacy to other games that emphasize permanent death. It doesn't have the secrets of Spelunky and it's more predictable than The Binding of Isaac, yet at the end of every game comes a desire to hop right back in, spend your gold on some upgrades and rack up more monster kills, something the game encourages with a challenging new-game-plus option that appears after the credits roll. Whether you play it on your home console or on the go, it's worth exploring Rogue Legacy's castle again and again and again.

From: www.gamespot.com


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