Darigaaz
Darigaaz
Darigaaz

It’s almost as if the writers are individuals with their own opinions that might disagree with each other, and not a collective ‘G/O Media’ hivemind that all think and feel the same way about things.

A media blog is writing stories about a media story? SHOCKGASP!

I forget who said it but one of the witnesses, a mutual friend, said something to the effect of “They both need help.”

No mention of one of the top-tier replies in the comments of the twitter post?

people who demand “no politics” in gaming are all cowards.

If you have 100 apples that’s plenty of apples. You cherry-picking everything to fit your narrative is the juvenile thing here.

It’s still there genius. There is indeed PLENTY of it.

I don’t know what the solution is though.

There’s plenty of housing near jobs. The problem is that the housing that’s near the job is expensive AF

bootlicking is not very Cute Puppy

They don’t fuckin’ care. Cops have bigger budgets than God, and taxpayers foot the bill for their wrongdoing. They *literally* don’t give a shit.  

How much money was wasted to have multiple police cars show up at a store and have to shut down said store for FOUR HOURS for a non-violent offense, especially compared to the cost of a pizza and a couple packs of cards?

Or to electrolyse hydrogen from, to power the vehicle.

So, justice should not be blind? The courts should deem some "actors" as bad and others as not and be more punitive on them if they are determined to be the latter?

I never understood the open anger that people have for buyers that enjoy their cars sitting still. There's plenty to enjoy, including the concept of preserving it for the future. Plenty of unspoiled, preserved Bugattis and Duesys are rolling art at this point. Just like this car. 

I disagree I think they are win win. There are 3 types of customers for a game, those who are 100% going to buy it, maybe they are a fan of the series or developers. Those who are 100% not going to buy it, maybe it’s a genre they don’t care for. And those who might buy it but are on the fence. That’s who demo’s are

I miss the days of shareware and demo discs included with gaming magazines!

I’ve bought a game or two went back to Best Buy told them the game was faulty and I got my money back, even Walmart let me, I’ve done it, maybe they’ve gotten more strict about it, its been awhile since I last returned a game. But anyways I get the point about waiting for price drop or sale or whatever but most

I mean that is just not true. Back in the early PS3 days, demos would convince me to buy games. I remember not being at all intersted in Mass Effect 2, even after watching reviews, but when I played the demo that allowed you to play through like the first two planets, I bought it when I saw it at Best Buy.

This is one of those discussions where both sides have a compelling point. I’ve been turned off by demos and I’ve bene turned on by them, but I usually don’t make a decision based on a demo alone.

Some games work better with demos than others, too. Getting to play the first hour or so of an RPG gives you a good idea of