Joofie
Joofie
Joofie

Because it’s 4 different people with different names and titles?

I thought Brad was like 11 during the blip and was now 16.

What I heard was either the studio or the studio’s translator demanded a literal translation for everything.

Their translator demanded a literal translation, and the word literally translates to like.

Their contract with Studio Khara holds that Studio Khara gets full control over the translation.

Studio Khara decided on the translation and didn’t allow changes.

Netflix didn’t do the translation.  Studio Khara did and didn’t allow changes to their translation.

Rumor on the street is that Studio Khara madate is that translations must done literally which is the reason that this line was changed, because it more literally translate to like than love. Similar to why everyone is Children instead of child now.

So like an inverse correlation? I could definitely see that.

Real Time with Pause is the normal description.

Pretty sure the MH designs were inspired by Mesoamerican art and script. 

1) Relying on the deck builder to build your mana base often leads to creating decks where you are consistently short on mana on the draw, even though that would not be the case in normal MtG.

They use demographic weightings.  It not just raw data.

1000 respondents is a really large sample size and is way more than enough to get an accurate reading.

It includes people under 45. It just didn’t have enough people under 45 to have enough datapoints to break out into crosstabs with a high enough confidence. 

Coming from Duels to Arena should be pretty simple. It plays very similarly to Duels.  The biggest change would be having full access to every card to make decks with, as opposed to most Duels games where you had a premade deck and several cards you can swap in and out. The other big change would be all games are

Marth whiffs on the Piranha Plant in a similar way in the first tweet video in the article.

The fact that the gen 2 starters aren’t the bottom 3 Pokemon is the worst part of this whole poll.

Individual movements or dance steps by themselves are not copyrightable, such as the basic waltz step, the hustle step, the grapevine, or the second position in classical ballet. The U.S. Copyright Office cannot register short dance routines consisting of only a few movements or steps with minor linear or spatial

You can definitely copyright a whole dance routine, though copyright law saws you can’t copyright a dance move or a dance made of a few dance moves. It will be interesting to see what the courts determine the threshold for that is.