Stock 2GB for now. Might upgrade later if I have the need to.
JGINQ's forum posts
Nope, I consider them (the trophies) as a bonus.
It's the game I'm really after.
Got it yesterday when it came out. EB Games person called me in the morning saying my preorder was in and I picked it up later. Just got the game, didn't have the cash to get the bundle.
Played a few hours of it already, I'm really liking it so far.
It's coming out in Canada, but only as a preorder through EB Games.
You can bet your ass that damn mission frustrated the hell out of me. Controller almost became friends with the TV more times than I can count.
In the end it was worth it though. Coming off that rush of getting the mission done right and seeing and hearing the achievement was cool.
I've got a 120hz Samsung and I love it.
Google for "avs forums". Those forums have all the answers you need.
Awesome, always cool to see more gamer girls!
Got Mile High Club on COD4 x2: back in November 07 when it first came out for PC and recently again about two months ago or so for Xbox 360.
[QUOTE="beganoo"]I wouldnt bother with the joystick thats mostly for people who have used joysticks on the arcade versions, and are used to that feel. I find it much easier on the dualshock. However, the game did frustrate me too much and I stop playing it because I never got better....hahaOk, so i think I'm fairly good at the game.Got in g1 few weeks back ect.All the time i've played sf4 (since it came out) I'v used the duaclshock3.Yesterday i got the hori fs3 and tbh i find it really hard to play with it (have in mind that i have never played any fighting game with a fightstick before).
My question is how much in your opinion will be the learning curve in my case.If you can, please give me some tips on traning and even maybe button layouts.
Any help will be much appreciated.
THE_BRUTALIZER
Don't listen to this guy. He obviously doesn't like SF4 enough to keep playing it.
What the other guy above said was true - practice makes perfect. It's going to be a bit weird first trying to adjust to the stick and I would recommend taking it slowly. Play the arcade mode a few times on normal or easy difficulty and try to pull out your combos until it becomes natural. The learning curve for a stick really isn't that hard if you put some time and effort into it.
Sounds like you answered your own question. If it's encouragement you need, I'll give it you - get a PS3, it rocks.
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