Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Agree with you Piers RE the Zelda games, the story is tired.


Windwaker was a bit different, but all the sailing around got annoying... Windwaker was meant to have been the future of one time line of Ocarina of time, and TP carries on from another or something like that...


I would prefer it if they would just make NEW games featuing the SAME Link, rather than some kid in a village somewhere who bares a resembalence to the hero of time and all that bo!!ocks.



Having said all that, I really enjoyed TP, especially a couple of new bits like chasing down the carriage on your horse and shooting arrows whilst riding. And the final one on one swordfight was cool!


Oh, and the cave of ordeals or whatever it was called was a bit of a mission... Took me several tries to get through all 50 rooms (having once failed on room 49... I literally throw the controller and screamed). The sense of acheivment after that was better than finishing the whole (basically quite easy) game!

Am reinstalling Hearts of Iron II tonight on my Mac. It's a totally nerdy WWII simulation/management game that takes hours to play and is really involving.


Just finished Bioshock on the Xbox 360 - loved the story and atmosphere, was probably a bit too easy for my liking though.


CofD III is still my fave, apparently they're going back to WWII for CoDV. As you can probably tell, I like WWII games.

another 3 hours yesterday - a few more missions just to open things out a bit and the story appears to be better written/acted than before


but it's isn't all about that - the living breathing city is.... stunning. The amount of "things" that just happen is incredible...


some random examples


here

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Money has to be raised in order to slow the almost terminal decline of public services bought on through years of neglect under the last government. There is no way to raise taxes that does not have some negative impacts / trade offs. But if we want public services and infrastructure that work then raise taxes we must.  Personally I'm glad that she is has gone some way to narrowing the inheritance loop hole which was being used by rich individuals (who are not farmers) to avoid tax. She's slightly rebalanced the burden away from the young, putting it more on wealthier pensioners (who let's face it, have been disproportionately protected for many, many years). And the NICs increase, whilst undoubtedly inflationary, won't be directly passed on (some will, some will likely be absorbed by companies); it's better than raising it on employees, which would have done more to depress growth. Overall, I think she's sailed a prudent course through very choppy waters. The electorate needs to get serious... you can't have European style services and US levels of tax. Borrowing for tax cuts, Truss style, it is is not. Of course the elephant in the room (growing ever larger now Trump is in office and threatening tariffs) is our relationship with the EU. If we want better growth, we need a closer relationship with our nearest and largest trading block. We will at some point have to review tax on transport more radically (as we see greater up take of electric vehicles). The most economically rational system would be one of dynamic road pricing. But politically, very difficult to do
    • Labour was right not to increase fuel duty - it's not just motorists it affects, but goods transport. Fuel goes up, inflation goes up. Inflation will go up now anyway, and growth will stagnate, because businesses will pass the employee NIC hikes onto customers.  I think farms should be exempt from the 20% IHT. I don't know any rich famers, only ones who work their fingers to the bone. But it's in their blood and taking that, often multi-generation, legacy out of the family is heart-breaking. Many work to such low yields, and yet they'll often still bring a lamb to the vet, even if the fees are more than the lamb's life (or death) is worth. Food security should be made a top priority in this country. And, even tho the tax is only for farms over £1m, that's probably not much when you add it all up. I think every incentive should be given to young people who want to take up the mantle. 
    • This link mau already have been posted but if not olease aign & share this petition - https://www.change.org/p/stop-the-closure-of-east-dulwich-post-office
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...