I don't have the skills to back it. XD
I was trying to be a little funny there. I think you guys did a really fine job and hit some important spots, although I think you guys might have gotten undercut by RFN having Syrenne this week. I was happy that you at least added that afront about Mr. Iwata and generally you guys had a good time. XD
I understand that Nintendo goofed by naming their game "Yoshi's Urui Warudo", but yeah I'm honestly not all that hyped about Pokken. The Pikachu with the Heihachi moxie going on is at least interesting, but it somehow feels like this game has a more shallow roster than even Pokemon Type Wild.
Actually, Ty. if you want to have an interesting double dose of New Business next episode, why don't you download
http://oneweakness.com/pokemon-type-wild.html this and compare and contrast it to what Namco has on offer with Pokken?
I do hope someone wants to talk about Yoshi's Wooly World. I want that game REALLY badly. @___@ there was a good 5 year stretch where I really wanted Good-Feel to make a Yoshi Game and just... it's so close! it's the reason I got my Wii U, and no ammount of Ty decrying it as yarn garbage will deter me. Tezuka knows what's up, and I know he's probably steered Good-Feel more in the Wario Land Shake-it direction for Wooly World.
also, I'd like to briefly mention your very wrong use of the term Hikikomori. The term, coined by Psycologist Dr. Tamaki Saitou, is defined as "A state that has become a problem by the late twenties, that involves cooping one's self in one's own home and not participating in society for
6 months or longer, but does not seem to have another psycological problem as it's principle source." Some theorize it stems from autism, while others thing it has to deal with some sort of PTSD, which is understandable due to asian culture in general's high pressure to achieve in school, work, and in one's love life by certain benchmarks in one's life. According to surveys taken by the Japanese government in 2010, there are 700,000 documented cases while studies estimate there's about 1,550,000 japanese citizens that when surveyed, exhibit signs that lead to a hikikomori lifestyle.
I'll leave you guys off with uh... what do you folks think of the recent NEET revolution in japan? is it a bold uprising against the garish ideal japanese salaryman lifestyle? Is it a problematic blight of kids just being lazy? What sort of pressure do you as english teachers get as far as trying to stear kids away from the part-time, low income lifestyle?