DeathBySmiley
DeathBySmiley
DeathBySmiley

they said out of the gate they had no plans for DLC. Generally, you have some part of the team already working on the next project before release, doing proof of concept work, etc.

Pulling them off to work on episodic DLC (which has become more rare since it’s peak in lieu of loot boxes) would only make sense if it’s

“Interest in Star Wars Jedi Survivor has decreased since release, which means it’s a bad game.”

“Interest in Tears of the Kingdom has decreased since release, which means it’s a bad game.”

Do we see how stupid this looks now?

Like, it’s a mediocre bloated open world game. And those are a dime a dozen. But the hate boner

The whole problem with this trend, which started with Amazon’s buy-now, is that you’re supposed to be able to patent the *how*, not the *what*. For example, if you invent a new drug that, say, cures a specific form of cancer, that doesn’t disallow other drug makers from making drugs to treat that particular form of

In other words:

Leveraging FOMO to artificially inflate the player base

Someone on the internet making a good faith attempt to spread Holocaust awareness = bad.

How progressive and tolerant of you.

“Couldn’t care less about the war between Nilfgard and the north or Ciri.”
I mean, I hate to tell you this, but this is literally what most of the novels are. The monster fighting it mostly confined to the short stories. Ciri is far more the focal point than Geralt. Geralt and his hansa exist to find Ciri, Ciri is the

“While it was dumb down compared to the books”

I mean, that is more about logistics than about “dumbing down”. You have to reduce the number of characters in an epic fantasy series, and you can’t visit every single location from the books from a cost and runtime limitation.

I really think the phrase “dumbing down” (for

The seasons that covered already written book material were largely fine (until the dudebros take a side quest in Dorne), because the books were fine.

Obviously it went off the rails in the last 3 seasons, but when you sign up to do an adaptation, and there’s nothing to adapt, it can be understood.

Don’t get me wrong,

This is literally from the book, because she doesn’t understand any of her power until the end of the 4th book (this is the end of the second). She doesn’t show any control of her power until book 5.

(Book number based on the sequential novels, not including the short stores).

To be clear, the show is dogshit, but

Excuse me sir, but that is spelled:

Daggett! Awesome!

Oh...and also Norbert.....yay I guess...

But yeah, he better have a taunt/victory message saying “That was Nuts!”

Yes, shows in America only work with clear good guys and bad guys, and an oversimplified plot that is light on world building or nuance.

This is why Game of Thrones was cancelled immediately.

Right, but the DLC is episodic content, which is vastly different from 20 dollar cat ears

The biggest thing that needs to be reiterated. The game doesn’t have microtransactions (planned DLC, but not microtransactions), meaning no pay-to-win loot, and all weapons, cosmetics, and power-ups are earned *in game* by *actually playing the game*. Crazy concept, I wonder if it could ever catch on.

Just chiming in to say this game is *excellent*, and can absolutely be played solo. The game actually as good story and building around it’s contained worlds (the overall story is milquetoast, but the individual worlds are fantastic), and the game absolutely rewards digging in to find side dungeons with cool loot,

They should make contact with short leaves.

Lightning is waaaaaaay too high. She has about as much character as a piece of wood with a grim face painted on it.

> Serious accidents and deaths on rollercoasters in the US aren’t exactly common, but they aren’t super rare

Steel behaves like a rigid spring, so compression and stretching both produce the same force. It’s counterintuitive because most materials you work with by hand are generally easy to tear when pulling apart, but with rigid steel, both compression and stretching forces produce the same result.

As such, a 45-degree

Now playing

> ...ummm, have you never seen Karen Gillan?