Videogame Review, Strike Force Bowling for the Microsoft Xbox (w/ Original Xbox Controller)
The game isn’t natural. We get a blend of irrelevant facts put together in decreasing ego. I don’t know why the game is rated for “everyone” because there’s alcohol in the game. Also, you’ll discover female players in very small shirts. You get a fantasy for your money. For example, you’ll get a beach to play near. But a realistic view is lacking because I can see a flying bird behind a tree’s leaves, although, the bird is supposed to be in the sky away from the tree and the tree is supposed to be close to me, not the bird. A problem with this lack of reality is twofold: 1) you wish for fantasy, 2) you wish for reality. Reality and fantasy get mixed up from this program. Artists need to understand reality before creating fiction or else a disorderly fashion in presentation will offend ignorant viewers to receive or deny. My big, huge Xbox controller is more interesting than the game itself. It’s possible to really pay attention to this original Xbox controller and just to think of the rest as background noise or dull colors, as if you’re in a room with paintings you don’t look at or even really notice. Being on a pirate ship for a bowling game is hilarious until millions of fictional items combine into disorderly views and looks. The golf bowling is better than I thought it would be; then again, I feel like a hole-in-two should be the real hole-in-one. Positioning myself against the pins proves to be an object worthy of confusion and intense visuality to full denial of beauty where lines meet in haste of graceful action. Xbox Live is dead now. From the looks of things, it’s now Xbox Privacy. Okay, I’m joking around a little, as you’re probably wondering if I’m using real words. If that concerns you I don’t think Strike Force Bowling would be your thing since it’s something of a random paradise. What happens in our video game industry is that when companies can’t offer better graphics with reality, they end up pretending fancy with unreal consequences in sport. That’s to say that it’s a lot easier for a company even these days to offer better graphics by presenting extremes in fiction and fantasy. Yet, people do still have feelings and emotions. Gamers are not just suddenly going to deny everything that happens due to authority and reason people naturally must live by. Fantasy videogames damaged our imaginations in the 2000’s and, if you’re as old as I am or more, we have trouble following rules and terms because of all these fantasies we grew up with. Think about it! Can a player read terms of use if he does not even know what a tree looks like? In Strike Force Bowling, trees look very suspicious, kind of like a cat’s tail pulled in a knot. My descriptions are a little uneasy. But, with playing so much nonsense, I’m wondering where my brain is. Just the pirates are lame and ridiculous for their cheering of sport and irrelevant procedure. Laughter is possible for this Xbox game. I’m laughing right at the game since it’s all very wonderful and terrible at the same time. Can you play bowling in space? And they call this “modern technology” of sorts? This isn’t modern technology. It’s one absurd presentation created by fools and dreamers. You don’t get skill, you don’t get genius- the game is a silly feature presentation without guts or glory.
https://www.deviantart.com/gameuniverso/art/Review-of-Strike-Force-Bowling-Xbox-877166442
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