![]() If you are leaving from Tokyo Disneyland to the Airport, again, the bus is the way to go. Going home on the other hand is different. There are always lots of seats available from the Airport. There is no need to book Narita Express in advance. I have ridden the Narita Express and Limousine Bus each about 30 times over the past 7 years as I travel from LA to Tokyo and often and live in Tokyo about 75% of the time. There is no such thing as a Green Coach for the Narita Express.at least I have never heard of it. Your cab driver may be unhappy with you as it will be a short trip. If you really want to go in simple luxury though, take the train to Shinjuku Station and take a short cab to your hotel. The trip will take over an hour to your hotel as it stops and several different hotels along the way. The Train will take you to either Tokyo Station or Shinjuku Station, but you will still have to hoof it or cab it to your hotel from there. A real plus if you have kids and are jetlagged. The biggest difference between Limousine Bus and the Train is that the bus will take you directly to your hotel in Shinjuku. Both the bus and the train are comfortable and cost pretty much the same (about $30). Whatever you do, DO NOT TAKE a taxi to Tokyo!! It will set you back about $300 to $400 and it will not be that comfortable. The best are for Limousine Bus or for Narita Express. Once you clear customs, you will come out to the main lobby, where you will find several transportation counters. ![]() Once you arrive at Narita airport, you will go through immigration and then customs. Tokyo's train and bus system is the best in the world. That is my recommendation.You are in luck. Enjoy the 6-8 hours of eye candy and appreciate it as a digital art piece that you can play. It is a streamlined experience, but one that your eyes and ears will thank you for. When that battle theme starts playing, you feel your veins flow with neon and code, strengthening your resolve and injecting you with some digital adrenaline that pumps you up to the max! Go in this game not looking for a metroidvania, or a highly complex systems game with lots of loot. The music is a perfect match to the visuals as well. The story is simple, the combat is simple, the exploration is minimal, and the world is just so gosh-darned PERFECT. It just nails that aesthetic so perfectly, you can't help but fall in love. Tiny details spatter this pixelated landscape and shine with an aesthetic of digital/80's/synthwave. You can absolutely tell the creators made this as a labour of love. ![]() The ART STYLE! Art style, atmosphere, graphics, design choice.whatever you want to call it is just OOZING with passion. Why I gave it such a high score is the initial reason I was invested in the Kickstarter back when. Now let me explain why I gave Narita Boy a 9, despite its fairly simple combat and exploration. There is nothing bad about this game, only a few hiccups and a couple of crashes but nothing that ruined the experience as the checkpoint system is very generous. Well, I recently bought it on the PS4 store during a holiday sale and let me say, it was worth every cent and more. Years go by and I completely forgot about it. Well, I I donated a few dollars back when it was on Kickstarter because I loved the art style. I donated a few dollars back when it was on Kickstarter because I loved the art style. The quote from "to be continued" in Japanese is great. There is a soundtrack song specifically singed for the game, not just at the beginning, and it's musically fantastic. (take care since here > spoiler > ) The ending of the game is one of the cutest I've ever seen. But brilliantly: the metaphor of the world inside programming and of the bits compared with the spirit. Very funny combat system after the first stages, the only drawback: perhaps too much written narration. Incredible amount of scenes and backgrounds, crazy atmosphere. Stratospheric pixel art, soundtrack that gradually becomes more and more grandiose, fantastic animations. It starts slowly, but slowly takes flight. Rarely have I seen so much passion behind a work, which in part also wants to be self-congratulatory and self-quoting. But Narita boy exudes love and passion from all pixels. It's not a 10 for just a few small burrs. In reality it is a masterpiece of contemporary videogaming and not only for the graphics and music (incredible), but for all the citations it is strongly imbued with. In reality it is a masterpiece of contemporary videogaming and not Apparently it looks like an underground indie game, typical of Kickstarter. Apparently it looks like an underground indie game, typical of Kickstarter.
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