That's a total of 1018 f*cks throughout the game's 69 story missions. 14.75 per mission. Fantastic.
That's a total of 1018 f*cks throughout the game's 69 story missions. 14.75 per mission. Fantastic.
ESRB ratings are often the precursor to a re-release on Sony's digital PlayStation Network, where you can buy a number of classic PS1 and PS2 games to be played on PS3, PSP, and Vita. Earlier this month, an ESRB rating for Persona 4 inadvertently revealed that Atlus would be re-releasing that classic PS2 game for PSN.
1st off, there is no debate. This is why I used sarcasm - and way to blow this out of proportion.
Video games aren't evil, but video gamers can be possessive and overly defensive assholes. Remember the uproar when FB bought Oculus? Do you honestly think this is what those people who spoke out against the acquisition had in mind? No. This is precisely what they didn't care for. This is the untapped potential that…
Tonight on FOX: Video Games play cruel joke on an old woman, making her believe she could really go outside.
...and this is why video games are evil...right?...right?
Even physicists and engineers can't get this right. Sad day indeed.
This is embarrassing to admit, but I haven't read much in the way of nonfiction books about video games. Don't get me wrong: there's some incredible work out there. In general, however, I've found that digging around for more books very quickly slides into work that is prohibitively technical, academic, or both.
And releasing in roughly 6 months? This is amazing news! Too much excitement!
But...why? Darn these kids and their fashion and their rock and roll!
*unwraps, eats Werther's*
What stupid jackass only wears frames.
Came to comment on the glasses too. That style is hilariously outdated and tacky.
Three minutes in and I'm having a hard time focusing on the content...too busy trying to figure out whether or not his glasses actually have lenses or if they're just frames.
I don't know about that. I mean I get what you mean. Someone is probably going to troll and the more people the more likely. But by encouraging niceties and such I think they could probably make some impact on that chance. Obviously they can't really do much about things out of their control though.
The Nintendo Direct we watched yesterday, which focused on Smash Bros? It contained more information than what Nintendo actually talked about. But if you pay close enough attention, you can catch some cool stuff hidden in the footage.
"We really wanted to figure out why were players being frustrated in games", Riot's Jeffrey Lin tells...Red Bull. "What were the common barriers to having a positive match in online games? What were the pain points players were having? One of the key insights we found early on was people or players weren't inherently…
It's not a proper judo match unless you've hugged your opponant, mid match
Yeah, if you're still in that phase wherein you listen to Linkin Park and dress in all black.
Now personality quizzes are supposed to be video games?