What I like more than this is when games make every individual aspect of difficulty (e.g. enemy health, enemy aggression, enemy damage, etc.) something you can tweak in the accessibility menu. Spider-Man 2 and The Last of Us Part 1 are two good examples of this.
I guess the AI didn't get the memo, but the stripes on Uncle Sam's hat have been erased.
Cons: *Added stress of fighting traffic for no reason *Added expense of gasoline for no reason *More burning of fossil fuels for no reason *Worse bathrooms that you have to share *Worse kitchen that you have to share *Worse dress code *Less ergonomic office chair *Worse monitors *Slower Internet (in my case, at least) *More annoying disruptions from coworkers *Less peace and quiet needed for concentration *Have to sit in traffic yet again after you get off work
Pros: *Managers get to feel more important when seeing all their little worker bees' butts in their chairs. *Promotes shitty "office culture" *Corporate real estate owners get to keep collecting rent
Read the room. Everyone hates these games.
I don't know. Handhelds are nice for travel, but they can hardly match the raw power of a dedicated home console.
What else do you expect from a video game themed pawn shop?
Insomniac has really set up an impressive iteration of the Marvel universe in these games. I'm a big fan of character designs and storylines. I would love to see them expand it to bring in other characters.
I have their 1gbps plan, but I don't see how I could utilize anything faster.
Healthcare is the only thing I'm expected to buy with absolutely no knowledge of what the cost will be until after I've bought it. It's completely insane that this is normal.