His actions and thoughts are between himself and God.
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Guillaume is on vacation, so again we roll along with a three man podcast.
Greg kicks-off New Business with a look at Axiom Verge 2, the sequel to the only Metroidvania that required an RFN disclosure. Launched as part of the Indie World event this week, Greg offers perspective on this more "naturalistic" sequel for those who already played its predecessor. We also spend a little time discussing the utility of shadow drops as part of events like Indie World, and if it diminished when there are just so many of them. James wrote a dumb thing, this is his New Business, I guess. Jon is playing Homefront: The Revolution in order to play TimeSplitters 2. Why? For some no reason the developers embedded a 4K TimeSpliters 2 port in Homefront: The Revolution and then hid it away in an Easter egg. TimeSplitters 2 remains a great game that needs official re-releases, but the real surprise is that Homefront: The Revolution is actually more fun than its reviews would indicate.
Listener Mail this week: asks us for our gaming achievement bucket list, asks us to prove we don't know anything about tabletop gaming, and forces us again to explore the line between collecting and hoarding. You can send us YOUR Bandai Playdia via email.
This episode was edited by James Jones. The "Men of Leisure" theme song was produced exclusively for Radio Free Nintendo by Perry Burkum. Hear more at Perry's SoundCloud. The Radio Free Nintendo logo was produced by Connor Strickland. See more of his work at his website.
This episode's ending music is Without Place from Axiom Verge. Composition by Thomas Happ. It was selected by Greg. All rights reserved by Thomas Happ Games LLC.