I just beat Paper Mario TTYD! I was level 27 when i beat it. (which is ironically the highest level in Paper Mario for N64)
Mariofire44's forum posts
What? This seems like a relatively normal pokemon event. What was special may I ask?DeanG642The special thing about it is that it simply defies almost all odds. It's a Kakuna, level 7, facing a Bulbasaur, level ~16. Even if both of Kakuna's types super effect Grass types (bug & poison), the main problems are levels, stats, and moves. Every pokemon raises stats differently, even same species. All Kakuna knew was Harden, String Shot, and Poison Sting. The only attack that does damage out of those is poison sting, and that is an extremely low amount of damage, lower leveled or not. Poison Sting has a ~10% chance of poisoning the foe - usually failing to have little effect, in other words.another significant thing is that the Bulbasaur didn't use Vine Whip often - one more attack from it, and the Kakuna would faint. The Abra, on the other hand, was simple: Abra only knows Teleport. Teleport in trainer battles swaps it out for another pokemon, similar to simply going to the "pokemon" option and choosing to shift pokemon. Abra was the last pokemon, so therefore, teleport was useless, giving all the time in the world for Kakuna to finally win the battle.
[QUOTE="Mariofire44"]I've played Video Games for longer than as far back as i can remember, so i'll tell you what games i really liked playing when i was 8 years old: If your son has a lot of friends (or at least one) that live(s) nearby, and you have a gamcube (with multiple controllers), i'd recommend Kirby Air Ride. GameSpot only rated it a 5.1, but they most likely didn't use the multiplayer features. Other great gamecube games are Parer Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Heck, you might even get a kick out of this, because there are four different files; the game is only single player, but it is a great game to start with if you want to get into RPG-styled games!) and Sonic Mega Collection (a real bargain, because it's a lot of games from the Sega Genesis and maybe a few others for a good price) I'm not sure what games are good for him for the Xboxes and the Playstation 3, because i never got those. But, then again, it'd probably keep the same problem, if not make it worse, because most of the games for those systems are either FPS or are very bloody. You could also try to pretend to get into the game he's playing. (assuming you're not already liking the game) That way, you can see what's actually in the game. If you see anything more than some blood (about the real-life equivelant of a handful or less; come on, we all see some blood as children, from cuts and bruises! Definately never the amount you'd see in some FPS games), you know you need to take some actions. (If not, then try to explain to your wife that it's not too much of a deal) First of all, if your wife's request isn't enough, think about this: at the rate he's playing FPS games, he's more likely to become a criminal later in life. (think about it: the boy gets the feeling that shooting random people is good. Later in life as an adult, he might remember that feeling, and actually do it. in real life. If that's not enough to make you want to get him to stop, then i just might report child neglect on you) Second, your son might not trust many people he doesn't know, because in his mind, he might think "i don't know if these people are good or bad. I'll just assume the worst." Chances are that you see this if your son generally avoids people he doesn't know. If all else fails, simply ban him from playing it, and move it somewhere he doesn't know and/or can't reach. He'll get very angry at you, but at least it solves the problem!metroidprime55
But your not shooting random people really in MW2, it is mainly enemy soldiers, and in No Russian you end up getting shot in the end, plus later in the game when you have to fight in the favila you are penilized for killing civilians.
Yes, but it's still shooting people he doesn't know.
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