I guess he's just going to hold on to it and not let anyone play it again. Seems short sighted to me. I'd love to play it.
I guess he's just going to hold on to it and not let anyone play it again. Seems short sighted to me. I'd love to play it.
I first played it on Xbox just before Xbox 360 came out, then again on Orange Box. I replayed it recently but not really because I just play the levels for secrets and not completion. That tripod battle almost stopped me the first time.
I often think of game ideas and trying to learn Python or Unity. I think my personality doesn't lend itself well to such abstract and immaterial pursuits, which is why I still haven't taken the plunge.
I miss Tower Records too. Sweet memories of several of them, one in my suburban town and one in Philly.
Same here. One day. It seems like a game way ahead of its time too with those different endings and the ability to start over with all your stats and go anywhere. A lot of new games could use that sort of thing.
You never really feel like you own it when it's digital and, in fact, I think you don't own it according to the small print. It's more like licenced to you.
I liked the first Flatout on Xbox a lot especially the minigames where you have to fling your driver out of the car into targets. The other Flatouts are just ok. I never liked their driving controls all that much. Not as good as Burnout.
It's a fun game and very accurate to the park from what I've been told. You don't have to play it with Kinect anymore too. They redid it without the Kinect controls.
I'm glad I still have it. After all my trading and whatnot, I usually keep my collections.
It's too bad because there are so many great Activision games for 2600. Whenever I get one of Atari's collections it always seems missing half the library.