18th August 2006, 1:17 AM
(This post was last modified: 20th August 2006, 11:36 PM by Dark Jaguar.)
They just decided to use an easy to reach menu button and they all agree, if the menu pauses, why have a seperate pause button?
Final Fantasy Tactics.
I do assume you mean the Playstation and not the super expensive PS2/DMV hybrid system that was only a failure in Japan.
Every single game listed is awesome, and they all have terrible voice acting (well except MGS for the most part).
Vagrant Story
Pretty much anything else with Final Fantasy on it. Up until X, they were all superb (X wasn't terrible per say, I just found it lacking compaired to the past).
Legend of Legaia
Oh, your friend should probably get a PS2 anyway. Those things are getting pretty cheap now, and they do play PS1 games you know. The only games that have issues are ones that either suck or are obscure Japanese titles anyway.
And after all that, there's a bunch of others he may want to play eventually, but those are like the top dogs of the pride... mixed metas...
Final Fantasy Tactics.
I do assume you mean the Playstation and not the super expensive PS2/DMV hybrid system that was only a failure in Japan.
Every single game listed is awesome, and they all have terrible voice acting (well except MGS for the most part).
Vagrant Story
Pretty much anything else with Final Fantasy on it. Up until X, they were all superb (X wasn't terrible per say, I just found it lacking compaired to the past).
Legend of Legaia
Oh, your friend should probably get a PS2 anyway. Those things are getting pretty cheap now, and they do play PS1 games you know. The only games that have issues are ones that either suck or are obscure Japanese titles anyway.
And after all that, there's a bunch of others he may want to play eventually, but those are like the top dogs of the pride... mixed metas...
"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)