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Friday, April 3, 2020

Videogame Review, Abadox for the Nintendo Entertainment System (w/ New Console and Used Game)



Videogame Review, Abadox for the Nintendo Entertainment System (w/ New Console and Used Game)

From what I can tell, abstraction eventually unfolds into questionable folds concerning depth of anxiety at large for unique notice.  Abadox is a no-man’s-land with features of discord and chaos spelling unknown futures all over the design at work.  Nothing is really familiar in this game- it’s a scientific form of psychosis in unknown territory, over and over again bringing the player’s dispute across the folds of unreality into a precise mess.  Who are these creatures?  What are they doing?  I’m rather quite good in this video game.  But, I’m not going to recommend a pretty buggy game just because I’m highly experienced of it with some success.  For one thing, we’re looking at views and looks changing over the slope of imaginary cause towards weird, odd monsters upon the galaxy in folds and I’m exact on describing these conundrums and overpushing of devices.  The NES controller (that I have a new, original version of) is now a cultural icon; however, a gamer can like the NES controller even if he or she hasn’t played everything on the Nintendo Entertainment System.  It’s certainly comfortable when I play with an NES controller for Abadox- there’s not a lot of controller to hold and my overpushing of buttons is more minimized with each button’s inward curve and rounded dent of ergonomics in action.  Playing Abadox is possible; beating Abadox is another feat entirely.  Honestly, I believe gamers have mostly overpaid for video games in terms of playing a game and beating a game.  We have video games we don’t complete, finish, or top off with absolution; there’s courses of different games we haven’t been to, and, in some unfortunate cases, we’ll never complete such games.  So, by paying for a whole, entire game that we haven’t beaten completely, we’ve basically paid too much, especially with Abadox being a very difficult challenge for even getting a slight taste of.  Gamers will soon realize they can’t beat many games and so they’ll continue buying games, many more of which they won’t complete, and the cycle continues, thus making our hard-earned dollars less useful for purchasing another video game console to begin with.  How many of you guys beat everything and leave nothing for granted?  The music in Abadox can seem entertaining for a while until you realize the game’s too extreme in presentation for enjoying, let alone beating, in mild comfort under stressful situations that later on provide exchange of feelings towards rage and mishap.  Abadox is a great work of science fiction.  Then again, I’m better off with games that are inviting rather than disgusting in artificial nature filled with floating eyeballs, corrupt tigers, and easily-mistaken obscurities of concern, annoyance, and irritating lines of thought.  It’s a masochist’s dream!  



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