Best route for Episode 9 | Backup, Back Down - Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain

Best route for Episode 9 | Backup, Back Down - Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain

This is more of a personal project and probably isn't how all the players want to do it. But damn if it isn't one of the best ways to play. This mission is really just untapped potential in the Metal Gear Solid series, because for once, there is always something to do. Also, if there's any way to express the point of Metal Gear Solid 4 in a mission, THIS is it. This is that game. This entire mission is just "Continental scale espionage. How do you fight an enemy that you can't see coming? Infinite Savoire Faire points+" The aspect ratio is definitely interesting. The game is at full scale, and it is taking up my entire monitor. But in this video, you are seeing this game played at what looks like a 4:3 Aspect Ratio. Which is trendy with the kids nowadays, sure. But because this game is set in 1984, it gives an odd sense of nostalgia coupled with the fact of this game's age of 10 years. At least for people like me, 2015 was at least a place of nostalgia (Though sure, 4:3 was no longer a standard- but the point is that they don't need to contradict, rather multiply it). Anyways, any instructions given with this video are not strict, but I'd be damned if this advice isn't widely accepted from now on. Today, a friend of mine asked me what I would label them as, for the potential future. I told them that they're asking me something that they haven't fully explained yet, and proceeded to guess if I should call them Dance Mum, MILF, or Soccer Coach. Knowing them, I also asked if this meant that they believe labels will help them define their goals like "potential chef" or "potential athlete" (bit silly if you ask me), to which they told me about the Edwin Lambert labelling theory. If there was anything less (more? idk) short-sighted than this, dentists sticking to a single discipline is a contender. Wait no, the dentist thing should be an analogy. Yes, it's like why should one lock themselves into a single discipline when there are several branches of hobbies that benefit the tree that is activity. And grounded in self-respect!