Fire Emblem has been through quite a rollercoaster journey on its path to success. After an initial debut on the Famicom in 1990 with Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light, the series remained a niche exclusive of the Land of the Rising Sun for thirteen years until it made it...
This being a slow-paced game, the frame drops are certainly more forgivable than they would be in a more action-heavy release like Breath of the Wild, but their presence at all is rather head-scratching at best. Fire Emblem: Three Houses doesn’t come off as being particularly hard on ...
Dragonnathan025 said: For as long as Pokemon has existed, there have been multiple Pokemon who lose against something else, they simply cannot beat it no matter how hard they try. It's how niches develop, it's how the metagame develops. My point here is, Dugtrio is good against some...
It's a straightforward path to the caverns below the monkey head on Monkey Island (ignoring the dive to certain death you need to take), but eventually, you will come to a split in the path with a message stating that you need to be an organized pirate to get through. This will start...
Fire Emblem: AwakeningNintendoReviewsRole-playingStrategy Fire Emblem Fates: Conquest Cheats & Secrets for Nintendo 3DS Published:December 11, 2024byMatt Karoglou Released on June 25, 2015, Fire Emblem Fates: Conquest is one-half of the Fire Emblem Fates series from Nintendo and […] ...
went through a phase of running Expert Belt + HP Bug exclusively to beat Celebi, that DPP Heatran often uses Passho Berry + HP Grass/Explosion to beat otherwise scary offensive waters - these highly specialised sets are a sign of innovation to flip a match-up on its head, not of ...
Super Chopper #4 severed the head of Drizzt Do'Urden and fed it to Mr. Nibblekins, her intellectual pet half-dragon fiendish hamster with seventeen levels of the Spelunker NPC class, which when combined with the robo-babe's low cut blouses, allowed her to flaunt her copious chesthair braid...
The players and coaching staff are all good. Our head coach prioritizes basics and emphasizes that we should do well from the scrims, but it seems that we’re not as good in scrims. I think there’s a bit of difference between scrims and competitions...