What guy?
What guy?
I think this is great news for anyone interested in XSEED's games, but I have to wonder, why limit the promotion with GameStop? Even if other brick-and-mortar stores don't offer preorders, there's several other online stores that do. I'm hoping we see more soundtracks offered for games as time passes, there definitely aren't enough.
I'm glad to see Capcom included the extra characters in the original package this time. I wanted to play as Proto Man in Mega Man 9, but I didn't feel the slight changes were worth paying extra for.
I definitely don't see anything about Let's Catch on the site... I was hoping to read a little about it!
My roommate's mother actually played Phantom Hourglass, and just got pretty much stuck at the very end of it. She doesn't play many games, but I remember he being a top-notch Dr. Mario player back on the NES. She's done Brain Age, and now Phantom Hourglass, but I don't know of anything else.
I can barely get my parents to play various Sudoku things in Brain Age, so I still don't know how he does it...
...Was this the feature that was teased in a podcast in November?
120 PS2 games? And I thought I was bad with about 45 Wii titles... Wow!
It's Sony's responsibility to make sure every important offering of the platform can be played on the platform.
But it is bad decision by Disney. I'm not sure why they'd decide this.
My roommate and I would like to play this game. We would not like to invest into a PSP.
Why can't the PS3 play PSN PSP titles? I know this wouldn't be available, but still, I'm really confused at why it can't. Wouldn't it make it easier to market the PSP to devs and publishers?
I would publish it if I were Ubisoft. How expensive could this property be?
Although, it could be that it's going to go gold AFTER No More Heroes 2 is released, so they would have to lead essentially two marketing campaigns, when, had it been developed earlier, they'd just lead one for the ports and the Wii sequel.
Oh!
The stages created can be used on the Wii, you just have to be able to patch or even replace a file in a Wii game you have backed up. The legality of backing up a game you own is something often debated, but I've never seen any legal precedent cited on the matter, though I haven't looked.
Regardless, it will be possible, and there's even potential to make the entire process of adding the new content created completely legally, if it's possible to load SD card data into the game, like what some have done with textures in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.