![]() The young fox's given name, Miles Prower, was overshadowed by his nickname, "Tails," derived from the fact that he possessed not one but two tails behind him. Not thinking much of it, Sonic ran off, the fox once again following. Looking behind him, Sonic spotted a young fox, who immediately hid from the blue hedgehog when he looked his way. Their peace could have been everlasting if not for a select few who desired to use the stones for their own selfish gains, causing the gods to take away the stones and hide them away on the island.Ī few days after landing, Sonic realized that he was being followed by someone. According to legend, there was once a great and prosperous people who lived on its shores, who achieved their greatness through the use of mysterious, powerful stones. Deciding to kick back and explore the isle, Sonic is completely oblivious to the legend connected to the island, and the similarities it has in relation to his adventures on South Island. On nothing more than an impulse, Sonic decides to land on an unassuming island, called West Side Island. Climbing into his trusty biplane, the red-and-white Tornado, the blue hedgehog begins flying the skies, looking for places unknown. Eggman once again, Sonic the Hedgehog grows restless, deciding to do what he does best - travel the world, looking for adventure. It reminds me to the difference between Halo CE and CE Anniversary.Some time after stopping Dr. The atmosphere is totally different, probably due to the lightning or the new textures, but it definitely feels different. In my case, Majora is my favourite game of all time, and even if the 3D version is and feels great to play and even if I don't care about the changes most people talk about, like the Zora swimming, the game just feels different. But oc each one will have their own preferences. They run smoothly, you can play both portable and TV in glorious 720p. To me, both Zelda on the N64 NSO were a blessing. My first contact was with the 64 version so I will always prefer that atmosphere and feeling, which the 3DS fails in providing. I imagine that depends on which one was the first version you played. And I don't know any friend or colleague who prefers the 3DS one, so it's not so uncommon. ![]() I play both versions whenever I want (I completed both some months ago, one after another), but I undoubtedly prefer both the 64 versions. It reminds me to the difference between Halo CE and CE Anniversary. Really hoping for a remaster one of these days that brings us the best of both versions.Ĭlick to shrink.I don't agree at all. ![]() I've really wanted to replay DQ8 but due to the DS/PS2 versions each having pro/cons I haven't gotten to it. I have the orchestral modded 3DS version, in fact that is basically why I have a modded 3ds (that and DQ7). Overall I think it's probably better but the music nerf really sucks if you don't have a modded 3ds to play the orchestral version.ĭQ8 - Mild graphic nerf, huge music nerf again to MIDI style music, but the visual equip menu stuff they bolted onto the US PS2 DQ8 was never that great. Another con : the menus have lag time (fixed on a hacked 3ds by using new 3ds mode overclocking, plus you can use the orchestral mod). There's some QoL stuff I think with finding map pieces on 3DS, also which is nice. They also overhauled the job system, in the PS1 version you could use everything you learned from every job, and they toned that down in the DS version. DS doesn't add much, the extra content sucks, the translation isn't that different, and the 2-screen setup makes emulation more annoying on a single TV / screen.ĭQ5-6 - I have always meant to play these and never quite gotten around to it (played to a bit after the timeskip of DQ5 on DS years ago), but I was planning on the SNES or PS2 versions based on DQ community feedback.ĭQ7 - I agree the original intro was much cooler (like an hour of puzzling or whatever with no combat) but the rest of the gameplay is streamlined a lot (including swapping out the original random encounters for the pseuo-random see them on the map style that is used now more often). ![]() ![]() After some brief research I played SNES version of Chrono Trigger again in 2020, except I used an MSU-1 patch for some better music and played it on my Analogue Super NT. ![]()
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