Welp, now I want a "game of the generation" talk after Jeff mentioned it.
I want it in the format of their worst song of the 80s/90s thing, where you have to put both the worst and best games on the same list, and make decisions on which games just weren't memorable enough either way to make the cut.
there are never hidden doors in the dark hallways between rooms.
I've encountered hidden doors in those corridors, but never in the middle of a straight corridor, just in those forks that just end in the middle of nowhere, so they're pretty easy to find.
To those familiar with the game, what's the skill/luck ratio on this?
Very luck based, especially in the first few floors where many enemy encounters have about a 50% chance of either ending your run or leveling you up. Once you've gained a few levels so you have some HP buffer, you can influence the outcome of encounters much more, but, yeah, ending up in Ben's situation here is very easy on the first two (or maybe even five) floors before you really have anything to work with.
I'm late to the game but hey kids: which version of of Minecraft should I buy? The two branches don't interact with each other, right?
The Windows Store version has crossplay with the console versions but very limited mod support, the Java version lets you do anything you can imagine except for play with the other versions. So kinda comes down to if you want the vanilla minecraft experience or not, and if you have friends to play with - which version they're using.
I'd personally go with the Java version but it really depends on who you're gonna play with and if you're interested in playing with all the crazy mods or not.
Feels like a game they may put up for free on EGS in a couple of years, and that seems like the right price. I think I could get a couple of hours of decent entertainment out of this, but it really doesn't seem like something I'd wish to spend a significant amount of money on, nor play to up the ending.
I wonder if there are settings to let you change the note names from the US/Western Europe ones to the ones common in Germany, Scandinavia and some Eastern European countries, in which B means A# and H is the name of the US B.
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