So I was hanging out with Gabe and he was like what do you want to do and i was like what do you want to do and he was like you want to make a comic or something and i was like okay.
Like Weird Worlds, Oasis hoists up a beloved genre by its ankles, shaking it vigoriously until the lunch money clinks to the floor. But where Digital Eel was concerned with space exploration games, Oasis tackles the sometimes unruly simulation of terrestrial Empires. You can try it for free, and you should. An entire round of the game lasts something like five minutes, so your curiosity won't exactly cost you the best years of your life.
An "anticdote": when we spoke at M.I.T., we became aquainted with a number of readers who were without exception one to two hundred times smarter than we are. They filled this vast intellectual gulf with thoughtful gifts, such as moist lemon bars, Rich Burlew's "On The Origin of PCs," comic strips they had made, and so forth.
One of the games on GameTunnel's list - DROD: Journey To Rooted Hold - was given to me at this event, but I did not really take the fullness of that into account because there was a miniature bottle of Jägermeister taped to the case. I've "played" that game quite a lot, actually. Indeed, I may rightly be called an expert.
(CW)TB out.
even the rats know that trouble's gonna come