Sakurai talks a bit about Smash Bros. DLC
Added: 23.04.2015 3:17 | 2 views | 0 comments
Its a huge undertaking to create a fighter, so I think we cant make them in large quantities. Id also like to feel refreshed when the project is over. However, since we have decided to tackle [DLC] once, Id like to offer as much fun [content] as possible. It will take a while from now, but please look forward to it.
From:
n4g.com
| Life Lessons From a Weary Amiibo Hunter
Added: 23.04.2015 2:00 | 8 views | 0 comments
My name is Ryan, and I have an amiibo problem. I'm not, like, completely addicted or anything. I only buy them socially. I can stop whenever I want; I just don't feel like it. As of this publishing, I have the entire Super Mario red-based series and ten of the Super Smash Bros. gold-based series, with five more on pre-order along with the Splatoon squid kids.
From:
www.gamerevolution.com
| Video: We Reckon This Fan-Made Ryu Intro for Super Smash Bros. Did Quite Well
Added: 22.04.2015 22:30 | 3 views | 0 comments
Still needs more training, though
From:
www.nintendolife.com
| Tales of More Wave Four Super Smash Bros. amiibo Pre-Order Woes and Cancellations Emerge
Added: 22.04.2015 22:10 | 9 views | 0 comments
ShopTo among the offending retailers
From:
www.nintendolife.com
| Deals of the Week: $350 PS4, Xbox One With Two Controllers, SSD and External Hard Drive Sale
Added: 22.04.2015 20:10 | 13 views | 0 comments
Plus Shadow of Mordor is $20, Smash Bros Wii U is $45, Titanfall is $13, and Sunset Overdrive is $30.
From:
www.ign.com
| The Gamesmen, Episode 66 Peripheral Theft
Added: 22.04.2015 4:17 | 12 views | 0 comments
Join Hardlydan, and Amras89 for game talk and fun! This time, The Gamesmen talk about the new Guitar Hero, Ryu might be coming to Smash Bros, Hearthstone finally coming to smartphones, a WayForward Apple watch game, more Konami and Kojima drama, a possible Sailor Moon game, modding a 3DS into PC remote desktop, and the Star Wars Battlefront reveal. Games discussed are Elite: Dangerous, Minecraft, and Grand Theft Auto V.
Tags: Games, Star, Wake, Kojima, There, John, Star Wars, Episode, Most, Grade, Auto, Grand Theft, Theft Auto, Konami, Smart
From:
n4g.com
| Affordable Space Adventures Review
Added: 21.04.2015 19:16 | 4 views | 0 comments
In a different 1995, a company called Uexplore began offering cost-effective trips to a distant planet. Upon arriving at their destination, private citizens piloted miniature ships known as Small Craft as they explored peaceful environments on the planet Spectaculon, taking in the alien sights and claiming territory for their own. After three days, a ship picked them up, and they returned home to tell others of the grand adventures waiting at the edge of the universe. Affordable Space Adventures is the story of one pilot--you--who is nearly done enjoying an excursion to that same distant planet. Suddenly, everything goes wrong. The carrier ship you are supposed to ride home in crashes and leaves you stranded until you can find a functioning communication pod and send a distress signal. Unfortunately, the surrounding environment isn't nearly as hospitable as the promotional videos led you to believe. You need to use every function your diminutive vessel possesses if you want to live to enjoy a bright tomorrow. The planet is beautiful, even when it's trying to kill you. At a glance, Affordable Space Adventures doesn't look particularly unique. It could easily be mistaken for a horizontal shooter like Returning to Affordable Space Adventures down the road should be easy because you can save up to three adventures at once. You can also revisit any stage you've already cleared by selecting it from a map. There are only a few tutorials throughout the experience, each limited to a few quick text prompts, so you won't have to wade through a bunch of filler if you decide to take another run at it. Another reason to revisit the campaign is to enjoy the game's multiplayer support. Any time you load a save file, you can assign second and third players their own tasks on Wii remotes and Wii U pro controllers. One player can control the ship, another can direct the spotlight, and a third can make internal adjustments on the gamepad. By nature of the game's design, teamwork and careful coordination are required in order to find success. Whoever has the gamepad at the moment also has a lot of power, and may find it difficult to resist killing the engine in the middle of a daring maneuver, with disastrous but short-lived results. Eventually, everyone will surely agree that it's time to do things right, and reaching an area goal together without too many mistakes always feels satisfying. It's a refreshing option, though it naturally wreaks havoc on the sense of isolation that the single-player mode so beautifully establishes. Although the game generally does a good job of anticipating and avoiding basic technical issues that might have dampened the experience--the controls are suitably precise, and the action is silky smooth, at least when your ship isn't sputtering through the early areas after recovering from early damage--it's still not without occasional faults. A couple of the later areas are overly demanding on the default difficulty setting, requiring precise timing and quick finger work for more extended periods as you are forced to stealthily navigate corridors stuffed full of floating sentries. The need for frequent adjustment can get tedious, particularly because the ship's settings revert to a safe default whenever it is taken out of commission. If you're retrying an area and you want to take another run at a particular gauntlet, you have to make a bunch of tweaks before you're even in a position to engage the engine. That slows down the pace and can make gameplay monotonous, but it's fortunately the exception and not the rule. Finally, in a few instances, load screens wear out their welcome, including the one that lingers when you first boot up the game, but those delays aren't persistent enough to ruin the experience. Perhaps someday, space travel really will be cheap, safe, and available from a company much like Uexplore. That day probably won't come during our lifetimes, though, which leaves us to seek our thrills in movies and games instead. Affordable Space Adventures is a great way to do precisely that, and it's especially welcome if you've been looking for a Wii U title that uses the hardware to offer a genuinely unique and reasonably substantial experience. Are you looking for a journey into the digital unknown that won't break the bank? If so, then is the one that you should embark upon.
From:
www.gamespot.com
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