<br>Americans celebrate Thanksgiving every November. It’s a time when families gather, friends reconnect and communities unite. On Thanksgiving you also announce what you're thankful for in life, so several of our writers decided to let everyone know exactly which video games they're thankful for. These thanks are comprised of releases from Thanksgiving 2019 to Thanksgiving 2020 and made up of a variety of reasons. Read on to see the titles everyone decided were personally meaningful enough from the past year to make the list!<br><br>When it comes to pure video game fun, it doesn’t get much better than Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater. While stating that a sports game, as extreme as it may be, is one of the best examples of the entertainment value of the medium may be confusing to some, anybody who has played Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater knows exactly why this is true. Striking the perfect balance between challenge and fun, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater was one of the first and best examples of a 3D game capturing the basic appeal of 2D games upon its release in 1999. It was a game that you could turn your brain off to play to melt away the hours, but the constant challenge of trying to perfect tricks or top that perfect run gave it enough pull and pattern repetition to keep you engaged, much as some of the best arcade games did in the ’80s. While its sequel reached the same heights, there was a notable downgrade as the series went on, culminating in some iterations that seemingly put the final nail in the coffin for the series. When Activision announced that Vicarious Visions would be bringing the series back by ways of remaking its first two entries, it was as cause for as much celebration as it was anxiety. Thankfully, though, they managed to strike the perfect balance of honoring the basic vibe of the original games while updating them just enough to fit in with modern sensibilities. Playing and looking basically as your rose-tinted mind remembers it did in 1999, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 1 + 2 is a perfect example of how to revive a classic and will allow a new generation of gamers to experience the pure joy the games brought so many years ago. In a medium with ever-increasing complexity, a masterfully-executed revival is something we can all be thankful for.<br><br> <br>Inazuma How To Get To Inazuma Things You Need to Do First in Inazuma All Inazuma Shrine Of Depth And Key Locations How to Access Inazuma’s Hidden Domains How To Unlock The Araumi Underground Domain The Sacred Sakura Tree And Its Rewards Tanuki Guide Electroculus Locations On Narukami, Inazuma Electroculus Locations On Tsurumi Island, Inazuma Electroculus Locations On Watatsumi Island, Inazuma Electroculus Locations On Kannazuka, Inazuma Electroculus Locations On Seirai Island, Inazuma Electroculus Locations On Yashiori Island, Inazuma How To Unlock The Palace In A Pool Domain Toki Alley Tales locations Where To Find Inazuma Specialties Where To Find Amakumo Fruit A Particularly Particular Author Quest Walkthrough How To Complete Destroy The Barrier Puzzles How To Complete The Puzzles On Suigetsu Pool Is<br><br> <br>When players explore Teyvat in their Genshin Impact adventures, they might notice that advancing even one World Level can be too overwhelming for their team - especially if they’re not strong enough to contend with enemies. While a natural thing to do here is to just step back a World Level and leisurely earn Adventure Ranks, they will sometimes experience being booted up a World Level against their will. If they spent their Adventure Rank grind with an underleveled comp, then they’ll end up being yeeted to obliv<br><br> <br>Not to mention, a lot of Hydro characters are known for their versatility. For instance, Neuvillette, Ayato and Childe are both some of the most powerful DPS in the game, while Barbara and Kokomi are ever-reliable healers. Furina and Nilou offer quite the balance between heals and attacks, while Yelan can break the SLG game maps at Constellation 6 with her multi-faceted abilit<br> <br>When building your Genshin Impact party, one important thing to remember is Elemental Resonance. When you have two characters of the same element, it will trigger Elemental Resonance and offer a significant buff to your party. Every element has a different Elemental Resonance b<br><br>My normal taste in games leans towards arcade and action, but this year has been one where the extra focus to hone in on pinpoint-perfect reflexes just hasn't been as available as I'd like. Instead I've been taking it easy, using gaming as a way to relax and escape into a more manageable world. The game that I'm thankful for this year is SnowRunner?, which doesn't have an enemy anywhere in the whole world but instead requires the player to use its tools to complete a huge series of jobs across hostile terrain. While sorting out the controls takes some effort, once learned there are a huge amount of tools available to tackle even the roughest wilderness. Mountain tracks carved by streams, muddy bogs, rivers frozen solid and snowdrifts that even the highest-traction tires can't get a grip on all stand in the way of delivering Cargo to Place. You can tackle the challenges with brute force, careful plotting of the optimal route or relying on the winch to basically drag the truck to the goal, but there's always a way if you're patient enough. Few events are timed and just about everything is optional if you decide that a particular job feels like a bit much. There's pressure in navigating the tougher areas, of course, but otherwise SnowRunner? is a game of choosing a task and tackling it however you like, driving across the beauty of a wilderness that's just barely been touched by humans. It's challenging, sure, but also relaxing and satisfying, and I'm thankful there are games that let me unwind into a simpler, more-focused world.<br>