Tauntworth
Ahn'Qiraj Raider
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That's fuckin blasphemy dawg.4 was absolute dogshit in my opinion.
That's fuckin blasphemy dawg.4 was absolute dogshit in my opinion.
That all sounds amazing.What part of killing mechs with ballerina legs that sound like retarded cows with break dancing before fighting the gay vampire for the tenth time was good? Was it the beer drinking roller blading albino monkey?
...how is something "720p/1080p" if it only runs at 30fps? That P specifically denotes 60fps.
No, it doesn't.how is something "720p/1080p" if it only runs at 30fps? That P specifically denotes 60fps.
I like [good] anime, and MGS is pretty fucking far from fine. I find the concept interesting and it's something I reallyshouldlike, but if there's a game out there with worse writing and more fourth wall breaking faggotry than MGS4, I glad that I've never heard of it.The MGS series is perfectly fine as long as you realise that, despite the Western action movie skin, it is ANIME AS FUCK.
Szlia summed it up well. Kojima's nonsense may not be the best stories out there, but they are certainly an experience all their own that you don't want to miss. It's like watching a movie that's crazy as fuck for the sake of watching something that's crazy as fuck.The plots in MGS games are... let's say... grandiose. The brilliant is constantly mixed with the grotesque to the point you get punch drunk and can't tell one from the other. These plots are exceptional and amazing, which does not mean they are good. As far as I am concerned it certainly means they are worthy of my time because there is nothing quite like them and their nuggets of genius are worth the stupid jokes and the undecipherable layers of verbose conspiracy.
Copy MGS story then add fake pregnacy drama then throw the President off some library or something in New York?The more I think about it the more I've come to like MGS2's story. Ok, the stuff with Rose sucked but I think most people who hate on it are still salty over the Raiden switcharoo. The game is also surprisingly relevant in the context of today's surveillance state.