Man, I sooo need more tiedye shirts, like now. Totally gonna order a couple once I get next paycheck. Also saw a real cool janis joplin shirt... mean i need shirts haha
Here is an analysis of all FLUDD-less stages in Super Mario Sunshine:
Hillside Cave - in terms of how easy or hard it is, it?s more of a mixed bag. If this is your first time playing, it won?t be easy, but it gets better the more you play. Dirty Lake - it goes in my top three on hardest secret stages. The second flip-tile segment is the worst. What?s even more shameful is that it?s in the first level. Ricco Tower - while it stays out of the top three in hardest secret stages, I struggled with this one the most in my adulthood years. The roller segments shouldn?t be too bad (if you can catch up with the next top face). Crossing the gears would be the hard part. Dune Bud Sand Castle - while it sucks that a FLUDD-less stage is the first mission in a level, this one is very easy. The idea of collapsing tiles everywhere may prove otherwise, but if you can just run and jump, this shouldn?t be a problem. Beach Cannon - rated ?I? for impossible for beginners, but this is in my top three easiest secret stages. All you need to do on the upper vanishing blocks is jump, slide, jump. Yoshi-Go-Round - Phase one: easy. Phase two: very troubling and missing will cost a life. Please stock up as many lives as you can before playing this stage. Phase three: you need to be very careful at this point. One screw-up will hurt big time. Hotel Lobby - hard, hard, HARD! There are more sand blocks, and they are harder to navigate. And when you get on that gear-like platform, you need to be very careful. Casino Delfino - easier than the other Sirena Beach secret stage, and it?s in my top three easiest stages. The Shell - this one is the #1 hardest secret stage in Super Mario Sunshine. But it is one of the very few Super Mario Sunshine stages that are hard for a very good reason. This would have to be one of my favorites as an adult, and my favorite mission in Noki Bay. Village Underside - when this stage is hard, it?s hard for a ridiculous reason. Ironically, I rarely had trouble with this stage due to my timing and accuracy skills.
Before Let’s Go Pikachu and Let’s Go Eevee came out, I actually wanted a Pok?mon game with just the first 151 Pok?mon species, plus the Alolan variants. And those Switch games gave us what I wanted. But here are the dealbreakers:
1. No Pok?mon breeding: I prefer using my own Pok?mon and I like to start fresh. The lack of Pok?mon breeding was a huge setback.
2. Lack of character customization: This was the worst character customization feature ever. It’s all just recolors of textures. They could’ve used the Celadon Department Store for more clothes for your character, but they didn’t.
3. Game Corner had no playable games: So Let’s Go Pikachu and Let’s Go Eevee is just like the original Red and Blue, but without mini-games. I also wished we had bike riding and items.
Of course, Fairy Pok?mon are quite useless in the first gen due to a lack of Dark and Dragon Pok?mon while there’s an over-abundance of Poison Pok?mon. But if there’s anything they did right, it would be the candies, the modern Pok?mon stats while no abilities are in the game, and some of the post-first gen moves like Shadow Ball.
Maybe they should have another game like Let’s Go Pikachu and Let’s Go Eevee, but with all the removed features added (except for abilities), both Kanto and Johto, all 251 Pok?mon (plus Alolan forms and maybe all Eevee evolutions), and proper character customization feature. Add to that, all 21 mini-games from Pok?mon Stadium and Pok?mon Stadium 2 and the champion modes associated with them. Since there will no longer be any new Pok?mon games with all Pok?mon species, I would just stick to the older ‘mons. At least we have a Nintendo Switch game where you can dex all 151 original Pok?mon.
Jeez, I can't remember a damn thing about Resident Evil remake. That is, in which order to get items, where they are, etc., etc. This should be "fun", lol.
So I just got started on building the largest Lego set in history. It took me two hours to assemble a lot of pieces together, and I’m only less than 10% complete.