I feel Worf dealing with cultural trauma could be a slice of its own.
I feel Worf dealing with cultural trauma could be a slice of its own.
I wonder if they do themed work days on the bridge to keep things interesting, like pajama day, crazy hat day, or piping in Tom Jones music to raise morale?
Well Captain Frizz, you’re the SECOND captain to strand their crew in the Delta Quadrant.
Cruising down on Vulcan, being relaxed and feeling free.
Next that you know it, you see a waahahahoooo Romulans in the galaxy?
Would this technically make anything Data paints AI art?
I love how the commercials are like “We also have mahjong and golf for your dad!”
Okay, Lemmy, which one of you was it?
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If you liked the gameplay of 1, I highly recommend 3 and 5. They more or less build off of what 1 establishes with its class system, all the while giving you more mechanics to play with, and more ways to customize your characters.
It’s not a bad one to start from, though OP did the right thing playing a modern version of it. I played through the original NES version, never again.
Hallelujah Splatoon classic has returned!
Thank you for an actual response and explanation. Anyone who has actually used google over the past few years should know “googling it” isn’t always helpful anymore. Besides, maybe we actually want to be the place where people find answers.
A useless ad delivery machine in the year 2023
And you could be right. Like I said, everything I know about these games is from hearsay, but it was definitely something that intrigued me to want to play (that and I love jRPGs in general)
So I found an explanation here
In the first game, your summon beast has to be Sugar for the flirty dialogue.
In the second, there’s a character named Lynn who tries to kiss your character, regardless of gender, and your protagonist reacts to it the same no matter which.
I could be thinking of another game on the gba, but it was a game where the female avatar was sort of an afterthought, so if you played as the girl, she would have the male’s same dialogue, and would flirt with some of the female characters in the game.
Warioland 4 is amazing, and definitely one of Nintendo’s greatest achievement. I didn’t appreciate the weirdness as much as a kid, but going back to it, I simply love how off the wall it goes, and how it is halfway a Mario platformer and halfway a sonic game due to you having to rush back through the stages. If you have ever played Pizza Tower, this is the game that inspired it.
Speaking a Wario, the Warioware games were some of my favorite pick up and play titles. There is just so much to do, even after you finish the short campaign. The DS one is by far the best one though.
Dragon Ball Z Legacy of Goku 2 and Buu’s Fury are some of the best Dragon Ball games period, and are pretty decent RPGs in their own right as well. I more or less experienced the entire story of Dragonball Z through those games, and they do a fairly decent job of retelling the events (Aside from the first Legacy of Goku game, which is garbage.) If nothing else, give the music a listen. Not only are their some good remixes of the American DBZ soundtrack, but a lot of original songs that are masterpieces.
I may add more if I think of any
I always wanted to try the Summon Knight games, but never seen a copy out in the wild. I mostly remember it from write ups in Nintendo Power and word of mouth from the gaiaonline forums. Apparently the game was pretty gay for a game released in the early 2000s (at least if you played as the female protag)
I definitely enjoyed Sword of Mana, though it definitely felt unpolished compared to what Square was putting out in those days. I just remember the OST hitting pretty hard, and me holding the GBA up to my ear to jam to the songs.
Get off my ship!