And besides the realization that people outside Japan do like JRPG, would they realize we don't like their shitty attempts to westernize or "fix" the looks of their JRPGs and other games when doing localizations?
And besides the realization that people outside Japan do like JRPG, would they realize we don't like their shitty attempts to westernize or "fix" the looks of their JRPGs and other games when doing localizations?
Yeah, I don't know why this fad with adding or exaggerating the eye bags, specially in Korea. Yes, they seem to be "very slightly" more noticeable in western faces, but ironically in the west they are deemed ugly, undesirable and they try to remove them or hide them. Look at any magazine or photo of any model.
Coming from an asian, he looks butt ugly now. And compared to western faces he's butt ugly too. So he's neither here nor there.
3. Unable to understand "meal ticket systems" at restaurants: 19 votes
Candidates por an Ig Nobel Prize?
Bah edit not working. To add to my post and talking about your previous post where you said the folding is what turns iron into steel, that's also wrong. The Tamahagane from which japanese swords are made, yes, it starts as iron and turns into steel, but not by folding but in a furnace by adding carbon into the mix…
Again you're still confusing two terms. Yes your pick has the faintly swirly pattern from wootz/damascus/folding steel which comes from the mix of harder/softer steel because of different levels of carbon content. What you still aren't getting is that we're talking about the Hamon, the lighter part of the blade in…
Besides the repeated folding. The hamon is produced by applying clay before the tempering thus producing the hard vs soft separation and that's the wave pattern seen.
You're confusing damascus/wootz steel patterns with the Hamon wave pattern that separates the sharp edge/hard tempered steel from the soft parts.
And it isn't uncontrollable. The swordsmith applies the clay in a certain pattern or design which gives the desired wave pattern. Some of this patterns could be considered signatures for skilled or famous swordsmiths.
The wave pattern isn't accidental. It's produced by the clay they apply when they do the tempering process which leaves the pattern.
You had me until: "If it wasn't for EA none of the sim city's after the very first would've existed."
More like China's biggest dick. As for the meaning take if however you want, but there you got a triple whammy of chinglish, sarcasm and insult...
What you said is correct. But that doesn't mean they put all their life accomplishments in the business card like he did. Like 99.999999% of them are just like any other business card, their name, business name, logo, position and contact data; and at most just a brief description of what their company do.
Problem is that she was already "dead" when she was admitted into the hospital. The question is, did the spouse sign anything?
There's nothing wrong naming your children after something that inspired you or you liked. It'd be no more different than picking names from books, history or other media. But as long as you apply some common sense and don't go overboard. Just like not picking names that make you appear to be born in the 19th century…
Yeah right $9.99 for your internet. $130 for your cable.
The problem is that to the bot it makes no difference if you're using a few seconds or the whole stuff. As mentioned in previous kotaku post and youtube personalities.
Yes, as mentioned in other Kotaku post and Youtube videos, it matches videos too.
But losing or having a slow connections only happens in backwater countries where M$ don't have plans to sell the Xbone, right? right?