2nd April 2010, 2:26 PM
Xenosaga was a disappointment for sure, but I'm saying so in comparison with the original more than anything. On their own, they're decent enough games, just nothing stellar.
If infinite realities exist, there is one where 4 awesome prequels and one awesome sequel was made. That's the one I want to go to. In it, Silent Hill 5 and Origins were abandoned in favor of making a Castlevania game that played like Metroid Prime, Megaman 10 completely revolutionised the Megaman series and had a conclusion to the original Megaman story, the Wii online network is better than XBox Live, they made spinoff games for Final Fantasy 6 filling in all the unexplained details of that universe, like the old war, the upbringing of Terra (starring Leo), the missing time during the 1 year time skip, and the cult of kefka trying to ressurect magic through terra in a sequel. They also made Chrono Break, with Shigeru Miyamoto directing, and Hideo Kojima took himself less seriously.
If infinite realities exist, there is one where 4 awesome prequels and one awesome sequel was made. That's the one I want to go to. In it, Silent Hill 5 and Origins were abandoned in favor of making a Castlevania game that played like Metroid Prime, Megaman 10 completely revolutionised the Megaman series and had a conclusion to the original Megaman story, the Wii online network is better than XBox Live, they made spinoff games for Final Fantasy 6 filling in all the unexplained details of that universe, like the old war, the upbringing of Terra (starring Leo), the missing time during the 1 year time skip, and the cult of kefka trying to ressurect magic through terra in a sequel. They also made Chrono Break, with Shigeru Miyamoto directing, and Hideo Kojima took himself less seriously.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)