Just watch out for a stray episode of This Week In Baseball.Download (Time: 2:57:53)
(Note: Due to a mishap possibly involving the Large Hadron Collider, Stephen's audio was not salvageable for New Business. We do apologize for the inconvenience.)
It's been another wacky few weeks for the Nintendo Free Radio crew, but they're back to lay down gaming and pop culture jocularity. Donald ended up opening
New Business with
Exist Archive, the Fogarty-class self-plagarism of Valkyrie Profile, before getting his stylus on in
Severed (Wii U) and some review games. Plus a game we'd really not rather talk about. Austen pulled in some recent indie darlings of the PlayStation 4 with
Seraph and
Aragami, and following the latest sordid tales of the shooter realm finishes with the long awaited
Sherlock Holmes: The Devil's Daughter.
Stephen enters for
Whatcha Watchin' with the newly relocated
Supergirl, and following the superhero discussion Donald interjects with British comedy panel show
Mock the Week and a very rare dub of a mid-90s Fire Emblem anime. And since it was before any of the games got localized or Smash Bros. made them famous, there's some interesting naming going on. (
The full show can be viewed on Youtube.) Austen pays off a Kickstarter from early in the year as he provides a counterbalancing view of
Vision of Escaflowne.
The
Feature discussion is a breakdown of the officially known information about the Nintendo Switch. Who's in? Will storage be a concern? Why the bloody hell do companies use .wav on shipping product? In the
Mushrooms, we slam PSN and Xbox Live while celebrating the removal of a milstone and facepalming heavily about onesies with pockets for melee weapons and Doritos.
The next episode might be 86, but it's also going to be recorded around the US Thanksgiving. And with that, we'd like to know what YOU'RE thankful for in a year that some people on the show have wanted to declare non-canon.
Email,
tweet or hit us up below and we'll make sure to enter it into the record for the next show!
This podcast was recorded on November 6 and was edited by Donald Theriault.