AureateFlux
AureateFlux
AureateFlux

If that's the case, the youtuber would lose revenue during a peak period for views. It's not that unusual for a video that comes out around the time of release of a game to get most of its views during the first two days it's up.

He definitely didn't do the same for the burners on the stove...

My brain is much happier with the motion in this video when I allow it to interpret the birdsong as the robot-camera's wheels squeaking as it moves around.

More than a few of these would definitely sell!

Yep, tactical shimapan is what got me, too!

I'm happy spelling "Aerith" while saying "Aeris."

Actually, the katakana spelling of her name ends with the letter "su," which is appropriately romanized as both /th/ and /s/, so both Aeris and Aerith are reasonable romanizations.

As a general rule of thumb, pretty much nothing that people say makes us more stupid actually does.

Yeah, our generation could barely program a shitty flash website.

Legs are a hell of a lot stronger than arms, and those machines have a relatively narrow margin of tolerance for how much force they can take. It would probably be pretty hard to punch it hard enough to damage it, but there are a lot of differences between a kick and a punch that could cause damage.

And I'm sure that that struggling business, JUST managing to keep in or around the black every month, really needed the extra expense of repairing the machine that month.

Torvin is frankly the only reason I'm remotely interested in checking out this DLC. He was easily the most entertaining character in the game.

Likewise. The in-game prompt looks like it will both drop you out of the game and make you sign up for a profile on some WB website, which sounds distinctly effortful.

There were some moments of genuine brilliance there.

I think Kerbal is probably one of the best examples of what Early Access done right can do.

So basically, the cuts are actually proof she's really doing it in one day, then, and they're just cutting out the boring bits where she listens to the whole song and thinks about the arrangement for a bit.

It's probably just a hastily mocked-up prop for the commercial.

Just satisfy yourself with the recognition that she's doing 7 arrangements all in one day (based on her clothing). Considering that an arrangement is basically rewriting a piece of music, even if she's actually taking her time to meticulously write the arrangement and then practice each one before filming it, doing

Yeah. A large part of what makes Minecraft compelling, though, isn't what there is TO DO, but what you CAN do. Minecraft, like EVE Online, is an amazing example of emergent gameplay. No Man's Sky doesn't have to actually have content, it just needs a way to spark emergent behaviors. I hope it'll accomplish that,

Sure, but it still needs to do some legwork to jumpstart that emergent gameplay. Minecraft is a good example— it provides systems that encourage experimentation and exploration well outside its core gameplay mechanisms. I'm just waiting to see that manifest in No Man's Sky.