Fantasy basketball – De’Aaron Fox, Zach LaVine trade analysis Emergency USA
Premier League injury news, predicted lineups, fantasy updates Emergency USA
Fantasy basketball: Dr. A’s weekly risers and fallers Emergency USA
NFL DFS: Optimizer unveils Week 16, 2024 daily fantasy football lineups, projections for DraftKings, FanDuel Emergency USA
Champions League injury news, predicted lineups, fantasy updates Emergency USA
Champions League injury news, predicted lineups, fantasy updates Emergency USA
Jordan Mason’s Time As A Fantasy Football Star Could Be Over As Chrisitan McCaffrey Nears Return Emergency USA
‘Metaphor: ReFantazio’ review in progress: The ‘Final Fantasy XV’ I’ve always wanted Emergency USA
Metaphor: ReFantazio review: like a brilliant fantasy Persona, only with one major catch Emergency USA
Graham asked me if I’d discovered what the metaphor in Metaphor: ReFantazio might be, and I replied, “I don’t know haha”, or something along those lines. Having given it more thought, I think there are two metaphors: 1) It plays quite like Persona. 2) Its story is like a commentary on our society… or something to that effect.
Metaphors aside, though, the game is a gigantic fantasy RPG that’s technically better than Persona 5 in a lot of ways. Structurally, it feels less repetitive. It has more animated cutscenes that elevate those key story moments. You can brush aside weaker enemies in real-time combat, rather than face them in tiresome turn-based tangoes. And overall, I think it’s the best game Persona or Persona-like Atlus have put out – it really is brilliant. But there’s a part of me that feels like it’s missing something that’ll leave it less ingrained in the memory than Persona 5 once its final chapter has closed.