Hey, whatever floats your boat.
So it seems!
If they just put the games on any indie storefront and allowed demos, videos, reviews, etc. like any other game, I'd be thrilled to support them. But locking them into a 1-bit $200 gimmick? That's not a good way to get…
There are some very novel, occasionally brilliant things on HN. This just doesn't happen to be one of them, IMO. Fun at $50, extremely overpriced at nearly $200 considering the competition. No real innovation. A crank…
I'm assuming the worst about a product I've never seen, perhaps, but only because I've used plenty of other products at a similar price point that seem MUCH better: Switch, Vita, various Android phones -- all mature…
Does X-Plane feature projectiles at all (guns, missiles)? If so, do those have to be sent over the network to deal with collisions with laggy hit boxes and such?
Why were they unable to? Is there some sort of Amazon corporate firewall that prevents access to Google services?
I mean, I get that. As a throwaway novelty gadget it seems fun enough to splurge $50 on. My first reaction was "oh cool, someone made one of those game emulator in a box things and added designer flourishes, seems like…
Thanks for explaining that. I've never heard of any of those things or brands, so I guess I'm not the target market.
Covid and chip shortages prob
But... why? It's so janky. Looks painful to hold, the games look like crappy flash games in monochrome, and the crank is just going to break off. What am I missing?
What's the point of this when a Switch Lite is $20 more?
He was such a criminal mastermind he managed to frame the casino for its own bombing.
Hey, whatever floats your boat.
So it seems!
If they just put the games on any indie storefront and allowed demos, videos, reviews, etc. like any other game, I'd be thrilled to support them. But locking them into a 1-bit $200 gimmick? That's not a good way to get…
There are some very novel, occasionally brilliant things on HN. This just doesn't happen to be one of them, IMO. Fun at $50, extremely overpriced at nearly $200 considering the competition. No real innovation. A crank…
I'm assuming the worst about a product I've never seen, perhaps, but only because I've used plenty of other products at a similar price point that seem MUCH better: Switch, Vita, various Android phones -- all mature…
Does X-Plane feature projectiles at all (guns, missiles)? If so, do those have to be sent over the network to deal with collisions with laggy hit boxes and such?
Why were they unable to? Is there some sort of Amazon corporate firewall that prevents access to Google services?
I mean, I get that. As a throwaway novelty gadget it seems fun enough to splurge $50 on. My first reaction was "oh cool, someone made one of those game emulator in a box things and added designer flourishes, seems like…
Thanks for explaining that. I've never heard of any of those things or brands, so I guess I'm not the target market.
Covid and chip shortages prob
But... why? It's so janky. Looks painful to hold, the games look like crappy flash games in monochrome, and the crank is just going to break off. What am I missing?
What's the point of this when a Switch Lite is $20 more?
He was such a criminal mastermind he managed to frame the casino for its own bombing.