I am still in Batman: Arkham City (when I’m not searching the city for Riddler trophies or other sidequests like a crazy person, I’m in the middle of trying to find Mr. Freeze) and I’ve also installed Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim and will probably post about my first impressions of that for Monday.
So… what are you playing?
Mom’s hair is looking pretty plastic in that commercial.
It was the 70’s. Ozone wasn’t a big deal yet.
I’m pretty sure you’d kill those flavor packets in the first use…
Given that they hadn’t yet grasped the whole “we could sell refill packets in the coffee/tea aisle!” thing, they probably included recipes in the package or, at least, information that it was possible to use your favorite “fruit juice” (with no sensitivity toward diabetic children!).
Diabetic children were the exception, not the norm, back in those gentler and simpler times of men with thick mustaches wearing leather vests and dancing to Disco Duck.
For me, the problem with the sidequests in this sort of game is that there’s almost always the sense of a ticking clock in the main storyline, and so I’m always feeling pressured to go on to the next plot point, or else EVERYONE’S GONNA DIE!! And then actually doing a sidequest is a stark reminder of the artifice of the game — miraculously, everyone does not in fact die even when I waste a few hours of game-time doing some unrelated task.
I wish real-life deadlines were like that.
I assume that the little screwing around things aren’t “really” happening. Only the important things happen and everything else is Batman processing.
That works. But the choices would be a little more interesting if you really had a countdown to get to the next plot point, and there was a tally of sidequests missed and the consequences in extra deaths.
The end of Mass Effect 2 is a little like that.
Yes. It is possible to beat Mass Effect 2 in 10 hours… Did I say “beat”? Let’s say “finish”.
play magic candle.
I’m so glad I don’t face deadlines such that anyone dies if they’re missed.
Well, yeah, that part’s bad, but it’s mitigated by the part where it’s impossible to actually miss the deadlines.