frozen desserts, michael, plumpers, terry, pandora's, books, steven, shakes, looking, gut, censorship, morrowind, save, saturn+, kelly, osbourne, pixel, nosferatu, bioware,
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The music is uniformly excellent, blending the timeless, new-age quality alley of other, alley similar games with a positive glow of its own. Desktop Shock Overall, my worst complaint about Divine Divinity is with its crashing issues, followed perhaps by a whine that the game feels like it should end before it really alley does. A late-game swamp area is unique in that your character must learn to morph into a ghost to get across it, but in the final battle against the evil deity, Mini Minnie had to assist me by pumping health and mana potions into my Warrior via programmable keyboard shortcuts for my ultimate success. Although combat isn't revolutionary by far, it is addictive and fun nonetheless, and the perpetual RPG rewards of constant gold, spells, and equipment egg the player on even though it doesn't offer Diablo II: Lord of Destruction's higher level of customizable, powerful weaponry, spells, skills and armor. I do award DD a hesitant thumb up for its flexibility and ease of use, plus its addictiveness and hip humor, with the hope that a newer patch will soon be released to address the "Desktop Shock" issue.
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