Justin Nation's Reviews
Strangely enough this isn't my first rodeo, back in the day I wrote for the N64HQ as well as a few other outlets on freelance gigs but then when the HQ closed I decided to step it up and started The 64 Source. As the first word of a follow-up system to the N64 began to swirl I then decided to venture out into completely new territory and started OperatioN2000, where I had very little regular reputable news to share. With no other options I decided create my own content focused on profiling key developers and their current relationship with Nintendo or "dream games" where I saw opportunities for Nintendo to dust off classics or recently-made games and do something new with them on improved hardware.
This was all going pretty well until my wife and I decided to have our first child and I then decided that it was time to hang it up and focus on my family. As I closed down both sites I did decide to partner with Billy Berghammer, another former N64HQ writer, who had created his own site, PlanetN2000. We agreed to move over the relevant content from the older sites to his and on top of that I had taken a grad school class in programming in ColdFusion and decided to offer to code the front-end and back-end for a new version of his site. Through these efforts the newer and more complete Planet GameCube was born! While I would occasionally contribute to that site, helping do things like working out Louie the Cat doing rumors and other odd things, I eventually decided to stop as my family obligations grew.
While I had continued to follow Nintendo through both the Wii and Wii U eras my TV time was limited enough that I began playing more PC games again. It is in the PC space that I began to play a number of independent games and they started to be the games I enjoyed the most. Between their lower price, their often less traditional gameplay and approach, and their great variety I was hooked!
With the launch of the Nintendo Switch I was already excited by the possibilities. The portability factor alone meant that I would have far more options and places I could play away from the TV, and games like Breath of the Wild looked impressive. With my oldest daughter poised to start her senior year in high school and my youngest finishing out junior high I started to see an opportunity to get back into amateur games journalism once again with what is now Nintendo World Report as well but I'd initially just thought about writing some editorials periodically. Then, right before the launch of the system, Nintendo had their Nindie-focused presentation and I saw my two most beloved gaming worlds colliding. The games I had been playing on my PC could now be played in a portable way and on Nintendo hardware! Being the type who tends to work against the normal current the concept behind Nindie Spotlight was born!
An intriguing historical mystery helps to add some flavor to this adventure, but the minigames miss more than they hit
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With its decidedly older-school approach to survival horror and more mundane “scares”, this won’t be a win for everyone
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While not making for a bad experience, paying for a game still dripping with in-game purchase nonsense isn’t cool
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Simple lesson: Don’t cross your cat or they’ll set a series of diabolical death traps for you
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Feeling like a shakily-adapted VR adventure, it’s a somewhat serene but often irritating experience
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A very attractive and satisfyingly violent run-n-gun shooter, though dogged by periodic performance issues
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If you don’t mind the repetitive grind of bringing up your giant beastie, it can be quite endearing
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This very dark take on childhood fairytale characters is quite cool pretty, but it gets let down by less inspired combat and controls
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Colorful, reasonably challenging, and with its own general feel, this budget tower defense title has appeal
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If your goal is to get into a groove of satisfying service, maintenance, and renovation tasks, this does a reasonable job of it
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An old favorite and 4 very different games make this pack fun, but as usual not all will probably be a hit for everyone
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While playing out in real time, your lack of direct control of your units in Warpips makes for a pretty unique feel in play
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While it’s always nice to see budget-priced offerings for under-represented genres, Last Beat Enhanced simply falls flat in most areas
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While not every event is medal-worthy, this game’s 10 Olympic events work surprisingly well and make for fun competition
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Undeniably fascinating visually, reky is a unique puzzler, but fumbles a bit in terms of clarity and controls
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You’ll be pressed to tap into your 5-letter word vocabulary to solve the puzzles in this collection
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Tapping into just about every available franchise it can, Kart Racers 3 has plenty of character but stalls a bit in some key areas
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Retro gaming mash-ups abound, and present quite a challenge, in this somewhat odd and reverent adventure
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On a budget it provides a reasonably-good puzzle platforming experience where you can freeze time to help complete increasingly-tough stages
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While it’s the right time of year for some creepiness and scares, quality still needs to count for something
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