Yea, 9-Volt is cool. It was so neat to see little snippets of all those NES games.
Yea, 9-Volt is cool. It was so neat to see little snippets of all those NES games.
Ok, neat. I got to several boss fights. Maybe I beat one of them this time.
Just played it. Questions: Is there a story, I had trouble telling. And is there some kind of metagame going on. It didn't seem like the game saved your scores or anything.
I want to see more train simulators, except I want one that simulates a model train set, not a real environment. Weird, I know.
Also more board game translations to digital format. I loved Carcassonne, Ticket to Ride and Catan, but they've done nothing since except the usual Hasbro's Scrabble, Monopoly, and Risk.
I guess that's Texas for you. I learned jack about it in my grade school in the north east.
It's, as you say, "chill". You also have some device that you can flash at fish and sometimes they respond and follow you. Maybe it's a flashlight or sonar. Also at the end of an area there is a strange tunnel you go through that takes you to some spirit realm where you unlock the next area. Gets kind of trippy.
What I learned, I think, is that the Aztecs were in Mexico and the Mayans in central America except for Chichen Itza.
It's called La Tomatina.
The festival is comming up on August 15th, next Wednesday. Whoohoo, I'm off to Spain. Ha ha.
I was reminded today that the question didn't say U.S. but North America. For me I consider US and Canada North America but according to wiki Mexico is also part of North America. I forget the exact question but it might have been something like Mayan ruin in North America or Aztec ruin in North America. I think the Mayan ruins are in what's considered Central America. Aztecs in Mexico. The answer might have been Chichen Itza which is right near the border between Mexico and Guatamala. Guatamala is considered Central America, Mexico North America. Ah, stuff you learn playing Trivial Pursuit.