Do you really think they can? Are you certain that in 5, 10 or at least 15 years things will change for the better? I hope so. But think about climate change. Years of reporting, warning, shouting from the rooftops. Nothing. Nothing changed because we cannot do anything when people in power don't see the need to change.
Yaaaawn. I like how game journalists think they can change the world by talking about the issues and that's it. I mean those same websites that doom-monger about state of game industry, review and hype the big moneymakers of those corporations.
We as the customers and players are on the receiving end of their rant (this cascade of articles been going for a couple of months), but guess what capitalism will always win against powerless and meaningless virtue signalling in the form of these opinion pieces. This is bigger than video games or entertainment industry. Unless people go out on the streets and truly revolt against the corporations, NOTHING will change. Equal distribution of wealth and fair rights for workers don't happen because we talk about it. We need to fight for it.
George Costanza
Well that's just wrong... Multiplication and division have equal priorities so they are done from left to right. So: 8 / 2 * (2 + 2)=8 / 2 * 4=4 * 4=16
Played it back in March on Netflix when it came out. It's a good game! The gimmick of having to take down all your buildings to finish each map is so satisfying and cathartic.
According to Wiki, last year's TGA was watched by over a 100 mil people, so someone does.
Thanks a lot for elaborating! I get your point, in fact recently I tried playing BioShock and the combat was unbearable. I don't think it was bad, but I simply had to stop after 30 minutes. I think for most old games, if you didn't play it at the time, you are gonna have a hard time to get into it.
I disagree about FF7 however. I think making a 'safe' remake like RE4 or Dead Space is fine to bring the game to the modern audience. But to use a remake as a smokescreen to reimagine the original and in some strange convoluted way make it a sequel as well is so much more up my alley. In the end if you love the original it's still there.
Unfortunately, historically there is not much traction between Golden Joystick and Game Awards when it comes to Voice Acting award. Since 2015 (when Golden Joysticks starting their Best Performance category) only ONCE did the same person win both and it was Maggie Robertson as Lady Dimitrescu in 2021. Here is hoping!
I'm not sure about other categories, but I do hope our Lord and Savior, Soken, will be recognized.
Interesting take. While I think RE4 is deserving the GotY nom, it didn't live up to my expectations. I have only played original a couple of years ago and it was a magical experience. I feel that remake lost most of the charm, the story lost good amount of the cheese, the music in the remake is truly a travesty compared to the original. I do like the combat a lot in the remake and parry system is really fun, but I don't feel the improvement in this regard as significant.
The one thing I love the remake for is Separate Ways, this is such a good campaign, the original was definitely subpar.
Despite my gripes, RE 4 is still pretty high on my GotY list. Not the best survival horror of the year though. Dead Space was absolutely incredible and I hope it wins Audio Design. Alas I have a feeling Hi-Fi Rush is the favorite in this one.
I wish this game scared me, but the horror is too cheap to really impact me.
Hitman (2016)
Persona 5 Royal
Resident Evil 4 (2005)
I wouldn't say 76 is a mediocre score. Just looking at Opencritic of this year, the median score on PS5 is 73, so AC Mirage is at least better than the median. Now, I know game scores are skewed horrendously and barely any outlet uses full scale (more like half of it at most), but still 70 is probably closer to an idea of mediocre. It's all subjective though, but it is fun to try and make sense of it all
In a year filled with great games, this is still my favorite game so far, somehow. Combat can feel clunky at times, but honestly the level design and the exploration is impeccable, plus SHODAN is such an unsettling villain.
I was quite surprised when I saw the reviews settling at mid-70s on average. Don't let that scare you away, but bear in mind no hand-holding in this one.
I agree wholeheartedly, I haven't played any Zelda before BotW and based purely on reviews you'd think it's the second coming, but then it's just kind of a cool open-world puzzle game with truly atrocious combat system. It feels like some people just love bland and uninspired as long as it has Zelda branding.
Probably one of my favorite MJ songs
He will never recover financially from this
Ngl made me chuckle
Just finished Sleeping Dogs, strange hybrid game from 2012. On one hand story mission structure from GTA games, melee combat emblematic of that era (focused on countering like Batman: Arkham or early AC games), shooting feels terrible and it borrows heavily from Max Payne. Then you have Hong Kong setting, but the game is made by a Western studio which allows for more graphic violence than say Yakuza series. All in all recommended for open world aficionados, who enjoy that GTA-feeling story, but definitely the ideas become stale after around 3-4 hour mark.
Went back to RDR2, almost 75 hours in and still not even close to finishing main story.