Game Fire is a powerful game booster, that enables you to enjoy a smoother and more pleasant gaming experience with a touch of a button by optimizing your computer for peak performance and focusing all system resources to run your favorite games.
It boosts your computer performance by suspending unnecessary Windows features, defragging system memory, optimizing Windows scheduled tasks, turning…
It's funny, I've followed the Advance Wars games since the GBA (later learning it was based off of Famicon Wars). I really enjoy the characters, their relationships with each other and their enemies, and the overall story about the four nations and the Black Hole Army. Currently on the third one and will probably tackle the fourth at a later date - I burn out fast on this genre.
However, the games themselves are extremely challenging and not something I'd probably play if I couldn't bend the rules a little bit. I personally feel the games are far too difficult, but I love seeing the events unfold throughout each title.
I suppose some people wouldn't understand this, but it's just another example of how ignoring the conventions of gameplay and doing things my own way enhances (or is sometimes the source) of my enjoyment with games I might otherwise touch.
Why is this important? Because it means I'm willing to buy the games if I can be assured of this still being possible. If I know deep down that I'm going to suck or it just isn't a game I'd normally play.. I'm gonna pass it up.
That's what game developers and publishers need to understand. Attempting to undermine people like me (and I'm not alone) by using "firmware upgrades, patches, and anti-hacking measures" into the systems and games is only gonna decrease the number of sales.
I'm not gonna say it's a majority chunk, but I'd like to think that at least 10% (possibly more) of the gaming population (as a whole, not the vocal ones) is made up of people who use Codebreakers, Action Replays and Homebrew to better enjoy the games we play. Look how big the Homebrew scene on the Wii was, it had been practically keeping the console alive!
Every time I see someone insult, harass, or otherwise verbally berate a person for inquiring, suggesting, or simply commenting in a positive manner regarding codes or hacking for video games.. part of me wants to spit on them.
The venomous "purists" and "elitists" who act like cheat devices or programs are sacrilegious and only people who can't play games use them are pretty much full of shit. Not only does it make them sound like complete jerks, it's the equivalent of a religion person telling someone they're going to hell for liking Harry Potter.
By the way, we're not and Harry Potter is an excellent series. Just felt like getting that off my chest.
Seems like I only ever get banana peels, and on rare occasions a single shell or mushroom. Oh, and the largely useless raccoon tail which still doesn't help against the cheap-ass blue shells. Sure feels like my blood pressure goes up after playing the game for a couple races. But yeah, thought to myself "I wonder if they've made any headway on something for the 3DS," cause I think about that at times like this.
Most of the places simply said not yet or "it's in the works but that's all I can say." Until you find that one site or two where a poor luckless sap asks and gets vilified for it by "gamers" who have nothing better to do than stick their nose in places it doesn't belong.
Kinda like those "reviews" where it's a single sentence along the lines of "worst movie ever" but no reasoning or explanation, or they simply say "garbage" like it's going to be an insightful or decision altering.
In a way, I'm reminded of that quote I posted a few days ago, where someone was telling fans they were being "unreasonable" for inquiring into the Spelunky HD remake going to PC.