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Clint Basinger (born December 20, 1986), [2] better known as LGR (originally an initialism of Lazy Game Reviews), is an American YouTuber who focuses on video game reviews, retrocomputing, and unboxing videos. His YouTube channel of the same name has been compared to Techmoan and The 8-Bit Guy.
OpenCritic collects links to external websites for video game reviews, providing a landing page for the reader. Reviews include both those that are scored (and thus entered into their aggregate score) and unscored reviews, including reviews that come from popular YouTube reviewers.
In July 2007, Croshaw uploaded two game reviews in video format to YouTube in the same style that would eventually be used for Zero Punctuation: one of the demo of The Darkness for the PlayStation 3, and the other of Fable: The Lost Chapters for the PC. Both were well-received and The Escapist was one of several publishers to offer Croshaw a ...
Shut Up & Sit Down (often abbreviated to SUSD) is a board game review website and YouTube channel headed by Quintin Smith, Matt Lees, and Tom Brewster. [2] The channel formerly had Paul Dean as a member, and has featured Ava Foxfort, Philippa Warr of Rock Paper Shotgun and PC Gamer, Emily from Emily and Things, and Brendan Caldwell of Rock Paper Shotgun.
At the end of the Spielberg Games review, it was implied that E.T. would be reviewed in The Angry Video Game Nerd: The Movie. Eventually, at TooManyGames 2011 and Magfest 2012, Rolfe confirmed that he would review E.T. in the film. [10] [11] E.T. programmer, Howard Scott Warshaw, also makes an appearance in the film. The film premiered July 21 ...
Shaboozey "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" Performance Huge crowd reaction when they hear that guitar work for this jam. J-Kwon performed the original "Tipsy" during the season 29 finale, which was hosted by ...
The Stomping Land was developed and published by SuperCrit, a group which included Alex Fundora. He conceived the game in 2013, and a Kickstarter campaign was launched later that year, seeking $20,000 to fund development. The campaign ultimately raised $114,000. The Stomping Land was released on May 30, 2014, as an Early Access game on Steam.
The game's Metacritic score of 60/100, indicating "mixed or average" reviews from critics, [2] is the lowest for any Yoshi title. [10] Craig Harris of IGN said the game was too short, and most critics thought the other Game Boy Advance game to use a tilt sensor, WarioWare: Twisted!, was a better example of tilt-sensing technology in video games.