When I got banned from online play on the Switch for using homebrew I stopped paying them for games on the platform. A lot of people are former pirates, and they'll only accept so much before they decide the grass was greener.
bread
Jeg synes det er meget naturligt. Hvis de var store fans af styret, så sad de nok i Iran.
I don't care about The Expanse, but I do care about Owlcat. I'll have to keep an eye on this one.
A trailer having a sad girl cover of a song never inspires confidence in me.
Have they released any open-world RPG's besides The Witcher 3 and Cyberpunk? Witcher 1 and 2 weren't, Thronebreaker wasn't.
Definitely, but as a counterpoint it's also much more sensible ergonomically. The Switch makes my hands hurt, the Steam Deck doesn't.
I don't care about Ciri being the main character, I like her, but I read the books and I do care about them feeling the need to make the character a witcher when this isn't the case in the books; she couldn't be a witcher nor does she need to.
It's not like I'm writing the game off, but it's a significant departure from the books, which makes me cautious, and I feel like challenging people to "read the books," is a bit disingenuous here.
I've been pretty consistently buying Nintendo consoles, but I'm not buying this one. Not just because of this, but I challenge these assholes to brick the device I end up playing their games on.
I presume they still haven't fixed the traversal stutter...
Very rarely would I be willing to spend 60 on a game. They're not getting 80 out of me unless they blow me while I play.
I'm not blaming UE5, but I'm capable of pattern recognition. There's a pattern of developers not fixing UE5 issues and releasing games with them still present. The fault lies with both game developers and UE developers.
If you're specifically talking about The Crew, you're missing the point. If you're being flippant, and mean online games in general, God forbid people take an interest in the health of their hobbies.