Coriakin
Coriakin
Coriakin

Only two Stephen King books have managed to terrify me as a teenager: the first was "Salem's Lot," which caused a lot of sleepless nights and sleeping with the lights on. The second was "It," which truly hit home for me since I've always been scared of clowns.

Joshua Middleton deserves more love for his clean yet surprisingly detailed and stylized art—his work on NYX blew me away, and his subsequent works are just pure awesomeness.

Are those really photos from The Wolverine? Or a remake of Breakfast at Tiffany's?

As someone who regularly plays DC Universe Online, yes, keyboards do work on the PS3. I use a wireless Logitech keyboard during DCUO sessions.

That ludicrous poster for Twilight: Breaking Dawn part 2 is a Photoshop Contest waiting to happen.

Does Source Code count? Or Groundhog Day?

Hopefully he'll be back with more unique game concepts. And who do we write to plead for a Rez HD release on PSN?

I actually remember him as Julia Louis-Dreyfus' ex-husband in "The New Adventures of Old Christine"—I think he was still with that series when he started filming Iron Man.

The music in New Vegas was okay, but what made turn off the radio was the DJ, Mr. Vegas—he's obviously no Three Dog, and most of the time I couldn't understand what he was saying. Wayne Newton is such a class act and all, but a radio DJ isn't one of them; he sounded like his words were being blended in with the

I like the minimalist approach, but maybe they should've kerned the letters a bit more closely. Ah well, it looks fine as it is.

Dark Phoenix is the result that happens when a host of the prime Phoenix Force is corrupted—they are not exactly the same. When people refer to "Phoenix," they actually mean the prime Phoenix Force, and not the corrupted "Dark Phoenix." But thanks to bad stories and bad writing through the years, "Phoenix" and "Dark

The Avengers vs. X-Men "event" is probably one of the worst crossovers in Marvel history, and a fine example of just how uncoordinated the current editors at Marvel are nowadays. Most of the heroes are acting bizarrely out of character, stories are out of sequence, and events in one book aren't even referenced in the

The world map in Pokemon Gold & Silver was particularly memorable for me—you knew you were in Johto, but as the main storyline progressed to the final stages, you found yourself seeing more familiar territory, and then suddenly you're back in the Kanto region, which turned out to be located just to the right of the

Trailer the Dog survived by following Claudia when she left the warehouse—how did I know that? Believe it or not, the dog has his own Twitter account, and he tweeted it there: https://twitter.com/TrailerTheDog/status/121273460088512513

I'd like to recommend Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas as well, as I've spent countless hours in those games and their DLC, and sometimes go back from time to time. And while the Baldur's Gate games were awesome, I somehow liked the Icewind Dale games even more.

Good Lord, that shot of Mr. Snuffleupagus isn't just disconcerting, it's downright terrifying...he looks like something only Cthulhu would dream up.

Who cares about championship titles? Those cute trophies with Pikachu holding a trophy—I want one. Now.

Now if they would only recast the Black Widow with Kate Beckinsale as Natasha...ScarJo was okay, but come on, if you believed she was a convincing Russian spy then there's a bridge I'd like to sell you...

Why is Jake permanently affixed to Finn's backpack? It's bothering me...least they could've done is added an AI-controlled second character or some coop play.

How right you are—first time I saw the images, they reminded me of flOw...got me thinking that maybe I should buy that upcoming Journey: Collector's Edition disc for the PS3, which also includes Flower and flOw.