Originally posted by NemeBro
I honestly thought Majora as a final boss was disappointing.He is hyped up to be some godlike being, then you fight him as a crackhead with whips.
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I thought he was pretty good final boss. He put up more of a fight than Ganon/dorf in OoT. Of course, using the Fierce Deity Mask makes the work very short and effortless. But why did he sound so feminine and weak? I'd love to know that.
to play the new fight night which finally added Mike tyson and George forman to the roster only to find out Gatti, Felix Trinidad, Oscar de la hoya, fernando vargas, hopkins, and floyd mayweather were removed. Wanted to throw my controller at the screen. Like I really wanted Tommy Morrison as part of the roster now
Originally posted by HueyFreeman
to play the new fight night which finally added Mike tyson and George forman to the roster only to find out Gatti, Felix Trinidad, Oscar de la hoya, fernando vargas, hopkins, and floyd mayweather were removed. Wanted to throw my controller at the screen. Like I really wanted Tommy Morrison as part of the roster now
You could've found that out before you bought it by checking out the full roster on the demo.
I have a two
In world of Warcraft finding that the Spider King in that appeared in warcraft III; Anub'Arak was the final boss in one of the first instances in Northrend. They redeemed him a little by having him randomly turn up in Trail of the Crusader, but that makes no sense and is a poor attempt to bring back a pretty well liked character. It's insulting when you consider Kel'thuzard got an entire level 80 raid based on taking him down, when Anub'Arak has done a buttload more and is just a normal instance boss.
In games such as Fable/Oblivion where in you get to choose to be good or evil, you cannot complete the game unless you are good and save the world. It feels like to complete the game you might have to do something out of character, which feels like the rest of the game being good or bad is irrelevent as your character is ultimately going to perform an act of ultimate goodness.