Of course, as the Verge points out, the big question is security. More and more medical devices are Internet enabled, but they're often terrifyingly hackable.
Of course, as the Verge points out, the big question is security. More and more medical devices are Internet enabled, but they're often terrifyingly hackable.
Have you missed the discussions going on about female representation in modern film and television? Would you not classify those as art?
There's a couple of reasons, I think.
For a mere £395 ($670) you can get yourself a life-size laser rifle from Fallout 3. It's the Wazer Wifle, a unique version of the AER9 rifle, remade using wood and fiberglass by the talented Thomas Hughes.
For anyone that doesn't have Blood Dragon yet, it's also included in the Far Cry 3 daily deal. So it's 75% off as well ($3.74 US).
Every one of those bullet points makes me smile in glee.
From the thread on neoGAF (http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthre…)
As a heads up, information is starting to appear that points to the Steam Summer Sale starting next Thursday, the 19th.
Nintendo doesn't *have* to do a thing. They are indeed free to make a game with their 'values' of what marriage is. But we are free to judge them for it.
If I recall, they took the time limit out and put it in an optional other mode you can play.
This is great news for me! I'm very likely to buy a PS4 later this year and will probably not get an Xbox One, and this was the one Xbox One exclusive that I was a little sad I wouldn't get to experience.
An entry has been found in the Steam database.
My response to this is the following:
Nope. Enemies only get stronger when the bonfire intensity goes up (either from entering a new game+, and then new game++, etc, or by burning a bonfire ascetic).
Well, you can always brute force your progression in DS2. Since enemies stop respawning after ~12 kills, you can just keep killing enemies and either go back to a bonfire or progress till you die over and over until eventually there are no regular enemies between yourself and the next boss.
They did not get an advance copy.
Especially interesting considering what they said last August...
I'm wondering if Kotaku's review system plays a part. I love the yes/no/not yet system, but it doesn't generate a numerical score, which means no contribution to Metacritic. And we've heard of lots of examples of Metacritic scores determining bonuses and such, as some publishers use them as an important gauge of…
We've seen it with photography, with digital cameras and now cameras in phones. We've seen it in video too, with video recorders and now youtube. So of course we'll see it with video games.
Thanks for the break down. The document wasn't available at the time I originally posted.