Profile avatar
superbunnyhop.bsky.social
Been on Japanese TV. Audiobooks, YouTube, Snake Eater. He/him/George Youtube: http://bit.ly/3TZoU2p Patreon: http://bit.ly/2BmKoOk Audiobooks: tinyurl.com/22r3mcz4 http://geosaga.net
206 posts 4,031 followers 225 following
Prolific Poster
Conversation Starter
comment in response to post
About 15 years. Yes, and yes. I was running Windows 10 on that PC for months before a recent HDD fail, now I'm trying to recover
comment in response to post
Blank blinking text cursor in upper-left of monitor, DOS-style
comment in response to post
Blank blinking text cursor in upper-left of monitor, DOS-style
comment in response to post
There aren't a lot of game companies around today that could point to releasing DOS games in the 90's. Monolith was one of 'em.
comment in response to post
comment in response to post
#365Games Day 49: Herzog Zwei (Genesis). I've rarely found strategy games I really click with but this one completely absorbed me. You play as a sick-ass fighter jet that can transform into a mech and take out enemy units yourself. An important early entry in the RTS genre! youtu.be/aCeTArc4M9c?...
comment in response to post
Yes!! The unlikely progenitor of the RTS genre! Westwood devs got their Dune 2 inspiration from playing local matches of this. Works great with RetroArch's netplay :D
comment in response to post
In the remake, I hope the dead baby mazes are even worse! I hope the dead baby mazes uninstall the game & delete your save!
comment in response to post
Those dead baby mazes WANTED you to feel like shit for 5-10 mins, succeeded at making you feel like shit for 5-10 mins before moving back to power fantasy, and gamers HATED it for that!
comment in response to post
There's the uncanny, the in-game universe as a still-life fake-world of stretched-over photographs & obviously pro-amateur actors. The aesthetic is mocking contemporary concepts of "realism." It's the earliest example I can remember of a big-budget game embracing what we now call "bad friction"
comment in response to post
Friday's experiments resulted in failure