Did_it_for_the_Alliance
Did_it_for_the_Alliance
Did_it_for_the_Alliance

Eh. It’s fair game when the community decided to datamine the code.

I’ve somehow never noticed how happy the RX-7 is. You need to have the Jalopnik crew critique your work.

I think the color changes were because the originals were really washed out. Looks like whoever edited the leather jacket photo just went HAM with the contrast/saturation sliders.

That’s the point. It’s a joke.

I second this.

It was. What a fun game. I’ll always fondly remember how OP Vivi is.

Nicholas Payne isn’t a paid writer for Kotaku, and where’s the other response? Kinja’s only showing Payne’s. Either way, it wasn’t bad enough to elicit a strong response like the one it got.

This right here, whatever it is, is amazing. Why has this not been posted in every single Deadspin article? This is “Derrick Harvey martial arts” level of awesome.

FFIX had some interesting designs. They were so Disney-esque to begin with.

Nah. He’s definitely remembered for being an Oilers player. He was only in Seattle for a couple of years.

It wasn’t great, but it certainly didn’t deserve the reply it got from an employee.

I guess he played in Seattle for a season or two, but he’s definitely a Pittsburgh player.

Steve Largent was incredible, but I always think OTs deserve more love. Jones only allowed 23 sacks in his entire career, and that’s why he should be in the conversation for the best Seattle player.

Hannah was a guard. He was amazing though.

I don’t know how I forgot about Pace (I was a big Faulk fan) and Ogden. McDaniel and Matthews weren’t nearly as dominant towards during the few years of overlap they had with Jones, though.

Nah. I still think Walter Jones. He only allowed 23 sacks and had 9 penalties in his 12 year career. That’s insane.

*cookie stuff.

Just out of of curiousity, who would you say is best in Seattle history? I think Richard Sherman. He’s the best. JK. I’d go with Walter Jones. One of the best LTs for more than a decade. The only OT that was arguably more dominant at any point during Jones’s career was Tony Boselli, whose career ended much earlier

Oh man, “Buddy Holly” was the first music video I had ever seen on a computer.

Dat sparring sequence. Hot damn.