KLR_Steve
KLR_Steve
KLR_Steve

Yep. Pratchett's been referring to it as "CSI: Ankh-Morpork."

Now playing

Going Postal wasn't great, although Charles Dance was quite good as Vetinari. As for The Watch, I get the impression that Pratchett is pretty actively involved with it, and it's possibly being considered canonical.

I imagine that's not the only thing we'll get in 2013. The Watch is supposed to air in the fall, and an adaptation of Unseen Academicals is currently in production.

I laughed for about five minutes straight when you used the word "throwback" to refer to Dexter's Lab. Honestly not sure if it was because it makes you sound incredibly young or makes me feel really old. As for cartoons today, there's more than just MLP. Adventure Time and Regular Show are fantastic. Gumball's

http://youtu.be/42439659 Personally I think it would be more appropriate to play as the anthropomorphic personification of pestilence, but I guess that wouldn't be as interesting from an aesthetic standpoint. Also, I'm not above shamelessly plugging my own work at every opportunity, so see above for something

A Russian Revolution setting would segue nicely into the first World War.

ACII and Rainbow 6: Patriots both use the Anvil engine, and while I haven't played the latter, I think I can safely assume that there isn't a great deal of freerunning in it. The engine provides a means for creating and processing — it's just a tool. The use of a button in order to initiate climbing is entirely

Your grievance lies with the mo-cap actors, animators, and programmers. The engine has nothing to do with it.

You and me both.

Well at least the wheelbarrow is safe, but the kitty? Really? Why would anyone not vote for that kickass robot?

You're referring to Toxoplasma gondii, which *may* have some effect on humans (tenuous link to schizophrenia, some mood disorders, etc) but does have a definite effect on rodents. Mice consume the parasite via cat feces, it causes them to lose their instinctual aversion to cat urine, and then cats eat the mice that

Quite, quite.

Upon which to comfortably sit, while eating human flesh.

Just give him a minute before you tell him he's also been pronouncing "Thames" wrong.

The parents are less likely to step on a forgotten Macbook in the middle of the night and have it lodged in their foot. That alone probably makes it worth it.

Did you say shrubberies?

To abbreviate what I stated above, the purpose of ensuring that people were armed was because they were the only line of defense that there was. They couldn't call in the cavalry, they were the cavalry. You seem to make a distinction between citizens and members of the military. What makes them not part of the

The "well-regulated" part refers to the forming of a militia for defense, written at a time when a country's average standing army was considerably small and the idea was that if Boston was attacked by a foreign power, Bostonians were responsible for taking care of it themselves. If there was a war, male adults would

I only noticed it after you mentioned it. Loaded fine for me with the latest version of Firefox on Mac with Adblock Plus. Cool idea, although the camera angle could have been matched better.

There is...another.