Well, the game I've been working on for a year and a half got shut down along with our development studio. Today is not the best of days.
Sucks to hear about visceral man.Well, the game I've been working on for a year and a half got shut down along with our development studio. Today is not the best of days.
Well, the game I've been working on for a year and a half got shut down along with our development studio. Today is not the best of days.
Come to Vegas? You get NHL hockey.Thanks guys. They're trying to place us elsewhere within the company but the more I think about it the more I feel like it's time to get out of California. It's too expensive to live here and I don't want to rent for the rest of my life.
Come to Vegas? You get NHL hockey.
At higher prices than in San Jose.
The hockey, yes. But the housing way less.
I tried but wasn't able to get into the EA NHL game. I would kill for a NHL game with oldschool controls, I'm not into the inaccessible simulation stuff.Why can't we have a good NHL video game? I know that EA has the exclusive rights to the games, so they really don't have to improve it since they're the only ones that can make a game...
Every other game (Madden, NBA 2K and MLB the Show) is so much better than the EA NHL franchise. I have all four, and I enjoy the NHL game the least by far.
Why can't we have a good NHL video game?
Because EA cares more about gouging their customers with microtransactions and DLC than actually producing quality games.
The other sports games do it too, though. Madden (yes, I know that's an EA game too) has the Ultimate Team as well. MLB The Show has coins that you could purchase. And NBA 2K has VC that you can buy. Microtranscations are ruining video games, but the companies are laughing their way to the bank.
Please no. EASHL and the skill-stick are the only good things they've done. And those were back in 09.I tried but wasn't able to get into the EA NHL game. I would kill for a NHL game with oldschool controls, I'm not into the inaccessible simulation stuff.
RIP to a future Hall of Fame baseball player