JohnGreenArt
JohnGreenArt
JohnGreenArt

I don't know, getting social cues from a cartoon that is a period piece with antiquated gender roles doesn't sound like an ideal teaching tool. This is not to disparage the game at all, and maybe it could help, but the exaggerated nature of the cartoon isn't entirely analogous to real life human behavior.

Actually, as it turns out, his line is "Doesn't everyone want their parents dead?"

Doesn't David say that every child ultimately wants their parents to die, not to kill them?

Video game related, but anyone else interested in bizarre cases of trademark dispute should look into Tim Langdell and Edge Games:

You can't COPYRIGHT "a", but you might be able to trademark "a" in a specific font or usage.

I was under the impression there would be games that could be played on the tablet without the need to also be played on the TV, but that the tablet is not portable. Meaning, someone else could be using the TV to watch a movie or whatever (via an input separate from the Wii U's hookup to the TV), but your Wii U system

Maybe because the only thing the flute did was turn the system on? Everything else was controlled by touch, be they squishy buttons or electroreceptive hieroglyphics. If the flute is just an on button and serves no other purpose it's just distracting. It's not that it's a bad idea, and it's certainly unique, but it

I didn't watch all of the clip you posted, but from what I saw Captain Ludwig's planets don't have gravitational pull on the player.

The version for the C64 sadly did not look very good: [www.gb64.com]

Forget the cameo, what's the story behind the girl who looks like she's dressed as Ursa from Superman II just a second before it?

Perfect location to make a horror film, guerrilla style.

Maybe she'll hire Gary Kurtz.

Am I missing something? Outlaws was totally a game. At least that image in the video is from the LucasArts 3rd-person shooter, but I admit to not knowing the music well enough.

So many of the mechanics from Gun are similar in RDR that it worked as a spiritual successor to me. Though there were one or two things I liked better in Gun, like the switch to 1st person during slow motion and even some of the voice acting.

This is exactly the post I would make if I was able to remember any episode names or details from Babylon 5 (haven't watched it since it first aired). What I *do* remember is how things subtly introduced in the first episode or so had a huge payoff many seasons later and it BLEW MY MIND. It was completely unheard of

False. LEGO has done a few mech-style robot sets under the CREATOR label. Most have been pretty small, like set #5764, but there was a really awesome one called the Titan XP, set #4508.

Zenimax/Bethesda could still sue whenever they want. Say during production of the series they get new corporate counsel. Unless the Nuka Break team has a contract of sorts giving them permission, it could all fall apart. Maybe the new legal or PR team(s) don't agree with the idea, or maybe a film studio signs rights

I believe it runs fine in DOSBox.

The difference is Campbell didn't sue Warhol. They'd have had every right to, but as Warhol was already making a name for himself as an artist, they saw it as exposure for their brand. Sure, the courts could've decided in Warhol's favor anyway, but there was never a court case to make any decision about it. So no