I used to play this game when I was about three or four (so we're talking late nineties here) for the PC. It was a train shunting puzzle game; that's literally the best way I can describe it. You changed signals and told trains where to go so they didn't crash. It had loads of different levels...
Utter nonsense. I watched this break on Twitter and was absolutely fuming. Apart from the inherent hypocrisy of responding to bullying concerns with bullying, Ross is a huge sci-fi fan, and has often supported the community where other comedians and chat show hosts might mock it to get a cheap...
The Stanley Parable, FTL: Faster Than Light, and Antichamber are the ones I'd recommend. They're all games I didn't actually want to finish.
Although yes, Morrowind is the best game in the world.
I've sunk a lot of hours into both games, and while I prefer Fallout 3, it's a very close competition for me. New Vegas had a much better main storyline, but at the same time the characters involved in the main storyline didn't have as much impact as those in Fallout 3's (Caesar is...
I got it for fourteen quid and it was well worth it as far as I'm concerned. I like to think of it as Skyrim's Knights of the Nine, which was also a good expansion despite not adding a whole new area to the game world.
As I see it (this being the perspective of a Bethesda fanboy, mind you) it...
Just finished the Dawnguard ending of...well, Dawnguard, having finished the Volkihar ending first. I've now moved back on to Morrowind while I search for a GBA SP, because I have weird classic Pokemon urges at the moment.
I'm going to be honest and say that while it was a disappointing story, I found myself wanting to see CoD's overarching storyline through to the end. Battlefield I dislike anyway. So I probably wouldn't buy either of them.
Apart from being made on Bethesda's engine with Bethesda's licensing and Bethesda's publishing? Na, they weren't involved at all. New Vegas looked dated, had a storyline that was about as immersive as a goldfish and had none of the post-apocalyptic feel that made me enjoy Fallout 3. It was...
Bloody Morrowind. Specifically Dwemer tombs. Especially after Oblivion's dungeons were all 'Oh. A zombie. Spell. No zombie.', I expected the same from Morrowind if not worse. How wrong I was...
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