KiwiMan
KiwiMan
KiwiMan

Nah, that wouldn't happen here I don't think. I don't see how she'd be getting any advantage by pretending to like games. If they had replaced all the normal judges with complete game nerds though, I can imagine there would be a few of the contestants pretending to like games all of a sudden...

You might have seen my other reply already, but I'm not saying it's weird to like a show. What's weird is that he intentionally conformed to a stereotype, by bringing up that he was a fan of the show for no good reason, trying to bait people into judging him for that. I guess to him it's not worth being a MLP fan if

I don't disagree with anything you said.

They didn't ignore everything you said. They agreed with it, then saw that you're a fucking weirdo.

Woman on the bottom right first implies that video games cause this sort of thing. Later she says that she never said games cause this sort of violence, but that there is a "causal link". Then she says that she never said there was a causal link, just that there's an indirect link. What a fucking idiot.

Lag

I know it's possible, and maybe my original comment seems to lean towards the employer too much - but that's only because just about everyone else seems to be refusing to accept he's anything but guilty.

Lots of comments about how the letter seems fishy. I don't see how.

But did you sell it for a profit? That was probably the way to go, buy it, try it, sell it while it's hard to get, then just buy one of the superior commercial ones when they release.

When someone makes a claim with no justification whatsoever, I don't think you have to then justify yourself when you call them out on it. The whole point in making a harsh two-sentence reply to his crazy statements was so I didn't have to delve into everything wrong with what he said.

I was only being partly sarcastic (when I said there's *no* chance anything he said is right). To say it is "obviously a problem with the system allocating memory" is a pretty wild thing to say because he doesn't back it up at all.

Your comment is rampant and unjustified speculation. I'd say there's no chance anything you said is right.

Yeah, but still, he would have done that anyway even if he didn't think they were trying to trace him right at that second. He was going off the grid, so he had to.

"That phone call at the end was brilliant. I was sitting there thinking...why is he doing that, why would he be talking to her like......oh wow....he just saved her, even after what had happened earlier."

"I'd call it a pretty reasonable reaction for a teenager to have. As much as I love my dad, if he came at my mom with a knife I'd have to rethink a few things."

"A lot of people thought that she was in Walt's car during the shootout scene"

Ah, those were the days - when you could actually return games.

I'm not going to go looking for the times they've said there were publicly playable demos on the Xbox One, but they have happened.

"Microsoft has been using Windows 7 power PCs"

The question isn't whether or not the unit can actually run games, it's if the unit is actually running some of the games we've been promised or told have been running on the platform. I can confirm first hand that the PAX demo of Titanfall was actually running on a PC, not an XBox One, so that is still one game that