I heard their founder was a sleaze-ball who played patty cake with married nightclub singers.
I heard their founder was a sleaze-ball who played patty cake with married nightclub singers.
Patty Jenkins should be glad she has HBO Max and Covid to scapegoat for the poor box office performance of WW84. That movie was a scattershot mess with a nonsensical plot, it was a definite drop off in quality from her first WW movie.
It’s not the first wildly silly sexualization he’s done but it’s one of the more notable ones.
Regardless the game was fine, it’s an interesting little puzzle game that offers quite the experience, definitely not worth the price however. This article blows a lot of things wildly out of proportion.
I played through the game and enjoyed the puzzle mechanics a lot. The violent and drugging parts were hard but preceded by intense repeated moments. First, I never shot the cop on the ground after I tied him up. That is completely optional and apparently your sick mind thought that up. Second, the drugging only starts…
The author is clearly focused on the husband bad actions, while she purposelly ignoring the wife bad actions. The obvious explanation to both is, gamification at the expense of the characters, and to make better use of the time loop, but let’s evaluate it at face value like the author did.
The very first loop, probably…
Also, there’s a really graphic animation for stabbing your wife to death in the game for…some reason?
What the everloving fuck did I just try to read?
Hate how this is written.
I disagree completely. I grew up on point-and-click adventure games and was thrilled to see the genre return, and focused in a very different direction.
The game feels more like a film you play through than a typical adventure game. The puzzles are there to give you access to new pieces of information, with the story…
Oh, we’re canceling video games now. Ok, I’m woke.
I wish I had the 12 minutes I spent reading this piece back.
I finished the game in about 2 hours (using a guide because I didn’t care enough to devote the time or energy to figuring it out myself), uninstalled it, shrugged, and went to bed.
I thoroughly enjoyed the game. Trying the different outcomes had me stuck to my seat. While there's different "official" endings the loops themselves can play out very different. I really enjoyed my time with the game. I highly recommend.
It’s been a long time since I read it, but I seem to remember the Supe’s had preserved powers and abilities that made them more akin to Super-Zombies. They had more intelligence than the run of the mill zombie, could articulate emotion and debate who and what planets (!) to eat, and even skip through the multiverse…
Here’s a more concise summary of the above story:
Its biggest issue is that it follows the exact same plot structure and story beats from the first, so you’re constantly reminded of the original and you’re going “Man, I should watch the first one.”
Yeah, it’s fine, and the Vigo stuff is good, but whenever I’ve watched Ghostbusters 2, it just makes me think I should be watching Ghostbusters instead. And that’s the worst kind of sequel for me...one that’s just kind of a less-good imitation of the original.
I really enjoyed Dr. Sleep. The initial reviews were so bad I thought maybe I just enjoyed it because of low expectations, but on viewing again it definitely holds up as a sequel and a standalone.
I can’t believe people are openly and proudly embracing an attitude towards this that led to one and sometimes nearly two 9/11’s worth of deaths of Americans per DAY.
Kids are basically dirty all day; from crawling around on floors and trying to put random shit in their mouths, babies are exposed to so much dirt and germs that not cleaning them daily definitely means your kids are at best, unclean