
This is particularly unfortunate for me when it comes to games like Prey, which has the whole frantic close quarters shooting that I find to be both difficult to satisfyingly manage and not very interesting. This can be applied to basically all titles with major multiplayer components, and even a few genres, such as first person shooters, which I’ve simply lost interest in. I regrettably must express such a sentiment often, as there simply are game genres that do not interest me. (Also, it’s running on the same engine as Horizon: Zero Dawn ) Even though I’ll probably not play it, as there is a multiplayer focus and such. Kojima Productions’ Death Stranding looks both upsettingly contemporary with a morose setting and the prevalence of boring old soldier boys, but the presence of a character who is clearly Guillermo Del Toro, a fetus in a jar, and a man who controls soldiers using his flaming wire tentacles are enough to reassure me that this game will be something interesting. I know you’re hurting for money Gearbox, but come on now. All of which sounds like justification for people to revisit this title, at least before realizing that Duke Nukem is pre-order DLC, and this remastered port will cost $50, even though the game was readily available for $5 over the past several years.
#CAUGHT EM IN THAT BOX AND FULL#
But I guess I’ll talk about them anyways.īulletstorm: Full Clip Edition, the long rumored remastered version of the 2011 first person shooter, except this remaster hopes to go the extra mile with 4K support and additional content, most notably the ability to play through the game as everybody chauvinistic icon of a bygone era, Duke Nukem. Going through events in chronological order with The Game Awards, there really wasn’t anything that I was particularly interested in checking out, as everything featured either failed to register with me as something I was interested, or focused on an aspect that left me worried about the state of the final product. That schmaltzy introduction aside, news this week primarily, and by primarily I mean entirely, came from the 2016 iterations of The Game Awards, a commercial guised as a poorly done awards show that I chose not to watch the entirety of, and the Playstation Experience, Sony’s personal little press and community event that is just shy of being an E3 press conference. I now understand each Pokemon and the power that’s inside. I travelled across the lands, searching far and wide. I may not be the very best, like no one ever was, but I’ve completed my real test to catch them all and I’ve followed my case to train them.

With 721 unique monsters in my Pokemon Bank, and the newly introduced 79 all organized neatly in my copy of Pokemon Moon, I now have access to all 800 Pokemon, and feel immensely satisfied by that fact. I was able to catch each and every officially released Pokemon. Over the past week, I was able to finally do something that was approximately 18 years in the making.
