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Sunday, March 20, 2022

Videogame Review, Pure Pool for the Nintendo Switch (w/ Portable Mode and Cheap $5 Purple Earphones from Dollar General Market)

Videogame Review, Pure Pool for the Nintendo Switch (w/ Portable Mode and Cheap $5 Purple Earphones from Dollar General Market)


The earphones only work for me.  For the average person, there’s no access to Nintendo Switch volume with these $5 purple earphones from Dollar General market.  A reviewer comment like “every game has bugs and errors” is totally worthless.  We need to improve technology instead of having random electronics with random features with pretending viewership of the future.  A guilty reader will be steaming from these words!  Too bad.  You know why unlimited entertainment is almost never universal praise.  Pure Pool can be quite a delight.  Of course, going from point A to point B is tricky.  The camera angles could use some work.  At times, from day to day of playing Pure Pool, for the gameplay reaching 27 hours of use so far, my personal experience itself is a strong limit.  I’m not always that good with thumbsticks.  For that matter, using my Pikachu wireless controller with the Nintendo Switch portable mode is a lifesaver.  I just have the Nintendo Switch portable screen stand and rest on a solid, fortified table while using my Pikachu wireless controller.  Gameplay improves dramatically.  The “$5 purple earphones” only work when I twist the earphones plug into the Nintendo Switch input with a very fancy trick that I don’t have many words for.  I only plug the earphones part of the way and keep twisting the earphones plug until I get volume for the earphones, and, I may have to adjust the Nintendo Switch volume control to trick the bugs and errors.  Normal people are not going to do any of this.  Pretty much, only I can do it.  My thoughts are very unusual.  Sometimes, a real gamer needs to “trick” a machine for normal gameplay- let’s say, by blowing a cartridge, or, using cotton on a game, or, by mixing cleaning fluid with water, or, by fitting a cartridge into the point of access, or, by adding sandpaper to your thumbsticks.  (Oh, wait.  That’s just me!  Ha ha.)  Pure Pool can be very challenging.  In fact, to reach higher levels of gameplay, I may have to stretch the missions around into practical consumption.  That means I have to complete some missions while ignoring other missions for some time.  $5 dollars is very cheap for earphones.  But, at this point, from knowing that my $5 purple earphones are brand new, and that, my Nintendo Switch is “like new” and used in gentle manner, I don’t think Nintendo can cut the compromise into greater freedoms of amplification in every case imaginable.  Pure Pool does get fun.  But, when I have fun, I need to remember what the quality really is and how quality should be in comparison with the technical description of improvements.  Do not use the joy-controllers.  The joy-controllers are not a manager for Pure Pool.  Try looking for more controller options for best results.  And, yet, normal people would assume that the Nintendo Switch console includes everything in the package, but it does not.  Unlimited entertainment is not always free.  And, from what you pay for and what you get from it, “unlimited entertainment” either gets very repetitive (from you doing the same thing over and over again), or, unlimited entertainment requires loitering and procrastination from suspicious players of video games, movies, comics, and so on.  Do you know that many businesses around California are fighting the loitering problem?  Do you know that many schools around California are fighting the procrastination problem?  Loitering is pointless space of abuse.  Procrastination is useless activity without goals.  Videogames end up attracting players who do not wish to put in the effort; and, if anything, putting in effort can be worthless for a game that does not pay off.  Pure Pool does pay off to a great extent.  Of course, for every pleasure I get, I also get two displeasures.  The Nintendo Switch game “box” does not include a real game cartridge.  Basically, you open the “box” and just get a code for the game with the Nintendo Switch online shopping channel.  We don’t get physical media for my case.  But, come to think of it, Wal-Mart can at least offer a better price and discount for Nintendo’s shopping game code.  Recently the video game market has been witness to what I can call a “dreaming liquidation”.  What is that?  Well, with a “dreaming liquidation” for the video game market, video games get cheaper and cheaper in price, quality, material, and substance.  Over the recent years, video games have been getting lower and lower prices to the point of corruption of data, and, companies take advantage of random features to make irrational claims about the future.  The games are not always really better.  We often just get random features, not qualities.  At this rate with modern technology, it can be impossible for video games to cost very much money, so we should expect a downturn with quality.  Old video games did seem simple; however, the “old” video games could’ve been stronger plastic and harder metal and thicker rubber.  Modern video games can have small, unimportant buttons.  Modern videogame consoles like a cell phone may not even have any real buttons at all!  And, reviewers call that “future” and such?  Don’t make me laugh!  Pure Pool is very well contained at the cost of fishy business with gameplay.  Some sound effects do not reach the Nintendo Switch portable screen, even with my earphones on; making matters interesting, my $5 purple earphones can have some better sound effects than my standard HD TV!!!  Man!  How do those polite freaks in our video game industry accept any of this?  Gamers need to examine their lives better.  Trust me, there’s a lot we need to improve 10 years from now, or, even 20 years from now.




https://www.deviantart.com/gameuniverso/art/Review-of-Pure-Pool-Switch-and-Cheap-Earphones-910551126

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