what exactly are you supposed to do on that game?
get mad at your partner?
what exactly are you supposed to do on that game?
get mad at your partner?
twesterm said:
You've never been to the Dallas area have you? There's one highway in particular where if you just drive the speed limit you'll be run over by everyone from grannies to cops. Not only are we bad drivers but we're bad drivers who drive really fast. |
At the very least, I am sure the people here are worse drivers. I mean, the last time I was on the free way a car somehow managed to get stuck on the center divider. Driving fast and bad is easy, but to do it while you're going at 2 MPH is a completely different art form that the residents of my neighborhood have truly mastered.
Like the days of our lives, I need some soda.

2things.
1. I like his shirt
2. I like how the table flips in the game too XD those programmers must have known they'd experience raged gamers
^^
part of the game is to flip the table though i don't know what you have to do.
As Miyamoto often did, upending the tea table.
Arcades in America have been dying for years. Now you can only find them in big cities. Heck, even on the west coast in cities like LA, San Diego and San Fransisco they're going out of business. People can just find the majority of the games they bring over on consoles. And the few they can't aren't as big as something like a DDR use to be. I can remember when Soul Calibur II was coming out, and no Arcade was picking it up. That's how bad Arcades had gotten, and that was 8 years ago.
In Asia, they're still big. Even bigger in other Asian countries outside of Japan like China, Korea, Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand. And there's no question why, when they get WAY more games. But also, some of those countries don't have as much focus on console gaming as we do.
| Kenryoku_Maxis said: Arcades in America have been dying for years. Now you can only find them in big cities. Heck, even on the west coast in cities like LA, San Diego and San Fransisco they're going out of business. People can just find the majority of the games they bring over on consoles. And the few they can't aren't as big as something like a DDR use to be. I can remember when Soul Calibur II was coming out, and no Arcade was picking it up. That's how bad Arcades had gotten, and that was 8 years ago. In Asia, they're still big. Even bigger in other Asian countries outside of Japan like China, Korea, Singapore, Indonesia and Thailand. And there's no question why, when they get WAY more games. But also, some of those countries don't have as much focus on console gaming as we do. |
How is the internet in places in Asia? Do a lot of people have broadband there?
I imagine that's why arcades are more or less dead in America (I don't know why they're still popular in Japan other than they love things like the OP's game that you can't really do at home) is because you can get the social gaming experience at home now.
twesterm said:
How is the internet in places in Asia? Do a lot of people have broadband there? I imagine that's why arcades are more or less dead in America (I don't know why they're still popular in Japan other than they love things like the OP's game that you can't really do at home) is because you can get the social gaming experience at home now. |
I know that PC gaming is pretty much the fastest growing (and largest) market for China and Korea. Other Asian nations seem to have a large market for the internet as well. A huge chunk of Ebay and Amazons markets are from the international scene. And of course MMOs and certain other PC genres are king in Asia.
Kenryoku_Maxis said:
I know that PC gaming is pretty much the fastest growing (and largest) market for China and Korea. Other Asian nations seem to have a large market for the internet as well. A huge chunk of Ebay and Amazons markets are from the international scene. And of course MMOs and certain other PC genres are king in Asia. |
But isn't a lot of it done at internet cafes and the likes and not at home?
I always used to go to Nickel Nickel when I lived in California. Such great times there (and it took nickels to boot!).
That of course, was more than 5 years ago, and I've heard it ran out of business since then. 'Tis such a shame. 