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I didn't quote it three times because I was recommending it (even though it IS fun in multiplayer co-op). I quoted it the third time because it's mentioned in the first post.
I'd wait to see if they even bothered to improve the co-op in Castlevania before buying it, I'm wagering Konami didn't bother. People can't drop in and drop out, only drop out of a hosted game, which is problematic for a game like that.
I'd save my cash for The Journey, personally, though the co-op is a bit more unconventional for that game (voice chat kinda kills the experience, I'm told, as they wanted to capture a certain feel). Think Ico or Out of this World in that regard.
I'd wait to see if they even bothered to improve the co-op in Castlevania before buying it, I'm wagering Konami didn't bother. People can't drop in and drop out, only drop out of a hosted game, which is problematic for a game like that.
I'd save my cash for The Journey, personally, though the co-op is a bit more unconventional for that game (voice chat kinda kills the experience, I'm told, as they wanted to capture a certain feel). Think Ico or Out of this World in that regard.
We'd be playing in the same room, as online co-op isn't really the thing we're dealing with here.
The Journey doesn't allow you to pick your co-op partner anyways. You just run into people randomly and you never learn their name or anything about them. It's all part of the experience.
I know you mentioned you guys don't like FPS'es, but Portal 2 was mentioned before, and I'd second that. It offers some really fun mind-bending challenges that will take the both of you to solve. My suggestion is to not use a guide for any of it, even if you're completely stuck, 'cause it makes it more fun to figure it out together.
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