In defense of the Moxxi cosplayer - she's at least doing something in-character.
In defense of the Moxxi cosplayer - she's at least doing something in-character.
I would sympathize, but I'm in the 501st Legion.
For those of us who can distinguish reality from fantasy - that is to say, the majority of rational human beings that play video games - "violent" as a descriptor is a lazy tactic by the media to put a negative connotation on an otherwise fascinating form of entertainment. For those who struggle to make that…
I know this article is almost a year old, but I wanted to let you know that I point people to it often.
Previously, I'd abhor sharing any space with ill-behaved children. Be it a casual dining or fancy restaurant, somehow, some way I'd find myself trapped with the worst of all human spawn. In my head, I would berate the parents, pointing out all the flaws of their lack of process in containing their little demons.
He could have purchased 6 Kinect XBOX bundles at Best Buy.
In the PC game you can get XP bonus items. Hell - you can even stack them.
When I talk to "regular" people about gaming, they usually have one of a few reactions:
Waiting is what made me lose enthusiasm for "Draw Something" last year. Being an artist, I found the game to have an awesome take on the "Pictionary" mechanic. I got tired of waiting on other people to either guess or draw. I started games with about 30 different people and still I'd only get one or two a day tops.
I'm in the school of thought that saying "Han shot first" implies that Greedo shot at all. In reality, he had no chance.
Greedo was determined to claim the bounty on Han, dead or alive. Unfortunately for him, Han wasn't going to be taken either way.
I'm in the opposite court. I'm frankly sick of Star Wars.
That's obvious, but I don't think it's a good practice.
My daughter is two months old (as of yesterday). In the last couple months:
They'd sell more on the 3DS Virtual Console.
From the onset, the philosophy of Andrew Ryan from the original two installments of the Bioshock series are heavily influenced by Ayn Rand - a person who was about as anti-religious as you can get. The socialist (anti-socialist?) and atheist overtones are impossible to disregard.
I think what people are failing to realize is the rather overt satire that is taking place. The administration of Columbia is forcing their religious views down your throat, all the while display actions that are the furthest from being the pinnacle of their teachings.