Spoiler Alert! - Deja Vu - Part 6
This is it! The conclusion of Deja Vu!
The end of the game consists of a lot of standing around in the sewer throwing trash down the drain and sometimes eating a handful of flour.
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This is it! The conclusion of Deja Vu!
The end of the game consists of a lot of standing around in the sewer throwing trash down the drain and sometimes eating a handful of flour.
Part 5 of Spoiler Alert!'s playthrough of Deja Vu is live!
Things are starting to get interesting now! I cut the tension by taking all of the food out of a fully-stocked kitchen and putting it in my pockets for later.
Part 4 of Spoiler Alert! for Deja Vu is here!
In which I totally didn't consult a walkthrough to find a part where I missed something, and then went back to fix it.
Also, the video being 13:37 is coincidental.
Part 3 of my playthrough of Deja Vu for the NES.
The pieces are starting to fall into place! Also, I follow the unwritten rule of 'always grab everything possible' and loot a high-end penthouse.
The Spoiler Alert! playthrough of Deja Vu continues.
Watch! As I stumble around the sewers. Marvel! As I spend a while at the slot machines trying to win cab fare. Witness! Me forgetting that I need to put a key in a door to unlock it.
Since I'm kicking off Spoiler Alert! this week with a playthrough of Deja Vu, I wanted to get down a few thoughts about the game itself.
I played through Deja Vu for the NES and broke it down into six parts, the first of which is right here!
Since there hasn't been a new Banjo Kazooie game in nearly ten years, I guess that the duo had to take up odd jobs to pay the bills.
One of the last remaining comic/game shops in town has added an arcade. It's right in the middle of the store, right behind all of the tables set aside for tabletop gaming. I haven't yet played the games they have, but I did get some pictures.
When I was a kid, it was tough for me to get the video games I wanted. They were super-expensive (relatively speaking), and television and magazines kept telling me that they were super cool and super amazing and super fun and made playing video games seem like a thing that I just had to do.
But, when the NES was the current generation, the games cost a lot of money, and since I didn't have a job, I couldn't buy very many. But what I could buy were books about video games, and that's pretty much the same thing, right?