“none of the all-seeing crime-prevention devices happened to flag a man who brought 10 automatic weapons with him to the Strip.”
“none of the all-seeing crime-prevention devices happened to flag a man who brought 10 automatic weapons with him to the Strip.”
The surveillance state was never meant to save us. It was meant to keep the 1% safe from us.
Clearly this only thing that is going to prevent something like this from happening is for us, as a country, to double down and really dedicate ourselves to sending houghts and prayers.
Good to know—-and it gets worse. I have three Android devices I could watch things on, my tablet, my phone, and my Android TV box that’s hooked up to my projector. My tablet and phone are running Oreo, so that leaves my Android TV box . . . or it would if the CraveTV app supported Android TV at all. Fancy that, their…
This is how I feel exactly about the first one. I’ve uninstalled and reinstalled it 5 times since it came out in 2014 and I just finally beat act 1 in July. It’s great but it’s exhausting and it’s cruel. I just reinstalled again yesterday. Let’s see if I can get at least halfway through Act 2.
I’m playing the game on Explorer, just so I can get the gist of the game (jumping into the first one on Classic was a mistake).
12 hours in myself and it feels like I’ve spent about
My god, this comment encapsulates my gaming experience at age 39.
As a lifelong RPG player, considering Baldur’s Gate 2 my favorite single player PC game in existence, I was highly interested when this genre made a sudden resurrection. Divinity, Pillars of Eternity, Tyranny.
I also have a serious case of FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) anxiety while playing this game. I worry I’ll miss cool side quests and side-story if I leave a certain area of the game or miss talking to a specific character. The poor vague quest direction only makes this much worse. There are also 6 characters you can quest…
If you play it on the easiest difficulty...it’s still decently fun, but the combat isn’t as challenging or punishing. This means it’s much easier to just have fun playing through it with sub-optimal builds
Really good review. I feel the same way, and I’m only about 10 hours in. I thought it was really good, but I am frustrated keeping track of various side quests, and where to go to complete them. Some quests I swear I’ve finished but it still doesn’t say complete. A game like Witcher or Fallout told me on the map where…
I’m enjoying myself with this game, but know deep down that I would be enjoying myself so much more with a more user-friendly quest log. My days of happily puzzling out obtuse quest hints are long behind me. Give me a destination and let me make the journey already.
I had tried the first one and enjoyed its system and premise but could never really get into it... but i took a risk and picked this one up and im having a blast. The fact that there is more to the story and the pre built toons that can be picked up for your party adds a lot
I’m about 6 hours of game play in, and the game is amazing. Unfortunately I’m quitting. It’s too freaking hard. Even on the easiest setting every encounter is more frustrating than fun. Every small advancement is a massive struggle. That should be a hard difficulty setting not the lowest setting.
I got two things from this review. One, this game seems pretty amazing sauce. Two, I also get that it isn’t for me. I adore, love AND cherish RPGs of all flavors and I’ve been playing them since days of yore. However, I find that due to time constraints I have to pause games for days or even a week or two when things…
Hummm....again, this is almost exactly how I felt about the first one and I didn’t have the will to finish it. Definitely going to wait until it’s on sale to pick it up.
FYI: CraveTV’s Android app is barely functional. If you’re a Canadian cord-cutter signing up for the 6 month Star Trek Star deal you might want to investigate further before jumping in.
I decided in roughly 2005 that I’d never use “lol” and I haven’t, mostly because chances are I wasn’t actually laughing out loud. And so not only do I use “haha,” “ha,” and “hahaha,” but also “heh” and maybe even “hehe”.
Eh, I never got on the ‘lol’ train and I’m kinda young. Today I turned 27! I’ve always used haha because when you’re amused by something you might say ha or haha or hahahahahahahaha (etc). And, well, that’s it. It’s fine but I can’t change my 10+ years of saying haha now. I don’t mind when people use the lol…