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That question was actually brought up to Ahriman when explaining the origins of the name. Frankly, it suggests that either the Emperor—or the universe itself, knew what was going to happen to the legion at the time. Or at least that's one theory.

I agree, though 'A Good Man Goes to War' kind of scraped at an interesting idea, namely that Rory was near elevated to Doctor-esque levels in bringing her back (traveling all abouts to call in favors via the Doctor) but there's just so much more and I feel like they've only scratched the surface—we're talking about a

Looking at it side by side, I'm kinda convinced the trouble with him in 'Phantom' is lighting-based. Puppet-Yoda in the original trilogy took place in a (okay, well, a studio) that was darkly, covered in fog, etc. In Phantom? This absurdly bright room, lots of light tones-it just highlights all the wrong details.

'Where's my Aliens?'

Wow, getting a little personal, aren't we?

Not whether or not you should have the opinion—whether or not it holds much merit in the eyes as other, that's all. I might understand that it is your opinion, I just think it's a personal take that is admittedly as biased as any opinion—and in discussing it, that I don't think there's much concrete merit to it.

I'd be more with you if I agreed at all (I don't) if your points weren't either nitpicks (Miranda's face repulses you? Seriously? You're listing that as a negative? Okay The power attacks aren't over the top ala JRPGS? And that's not a stylistic choice but an actual negative? o...kay...). Or I just plain don't

Oh wow, so you mean one sub-plot of the game is like one part of a series which is itself a 'Robot Upririsng against their masters', one of the most common threads in AI Sci-fi stories. But it's got Nomads, so it's BSG (that they are an Ancestor-worshipping Alien Race that is forced to live their lives in the

Wait, Battlestar Galactica was about a race of super-intelligent pan-dimensional monsters who want to get all the sentient races of the galaxy together so they can wipe them out? And they're coming and only one man can unite the disparate races of the galaxy together to repel their threat?

Yeah, you could really tell that Capcom was going to give up on the fighting game genre at that point. It felt like it was desperately slapped together and just shoved out. Which was weird because I really LIKED CVS2 (despite it's pretty myrid flaws, including some of the stupidly easy Super combos).

The Running Man. Specifically, the ending to it. Or hell, most of King's stuff. Starship, as was said. Watchmen deviated pretty heavily—but that pales in comparison to say, the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen (or V for Vendetta). You could have a lot of fun with this, really!

"So what should be funded, schools or missions that observe how a spider spins a web in zero g'

Wellllll, there might be a pretty good argument for having to have a chance in an alien invasion movie, yeah, I'll give you that, though I'm not sure what that says about the idea in general. I guess part of the reason for irritation for some people is that regarding aliens—it's the only story being told. There's

There are better ways to make it believable though than just 'because the story doesn't work otherwise'—That's a weak argument. The aliens are a fringe group that isn't supported by the main whole: The aliens believe themselves altruists and are subjugating the community as part of a larger empire, using minimal

*cough* He was being sarcastic.

'The bottom line is, Christopher Nolan does have a track record — which includes plenty of weird choices that he's been able to make us get on board with. So until we actually see a trailer in which Bane sounds wacky, it's probably best to reserve judgment.'

2 made me laugh, but you forgot 'We would get a REALLY cool animatronic Wrex'

I guess the sub-heading could be 'Capcom fails at not-dumping-images-into-its-website-cache-before-secret-reveals'

I can't claim the legitimacy of this, as I'm just not sure about it...

...You didn't see it?