@SolCross: Yeah, I don't mind the coverage Kotaku has done following that first article.
@Wafflemao: I could see enjoying it if you were a fan of the games, but I found the whole thing rather dumb. Guess in that sense it's true to the source material?
@CandlejackDANZA: I don't think Bashcraft needs any kind of segue to talk about Japanese stars.
In related news, Ikea is suing Larry "Larbo" Bonham for adding an extra pair of legs to one of their dining chairs. Ikea claims Bonham violated their End User License Agreement (EULA) by making modifications to Ikea's proprietary chairware that would allow the device to be tilted backwards without tipping over (an…
I am not sure you can write "must make the best game you can possible make" into a contract. Even if IW was half-assing it, they still delivered a reasonable product; wasn't it Activision's job to motivate and, y'know, manage them?
@SG-17: I like that one.
@Pyure: HOW DO YOU DENY HEADSHOTS?
@urbanphoenix27: I wouldn't have if I were in their position. It's easy to interpret this stuff in hindsight, but nearly impossible to predict it.
@TRT-X: This actually makes a lot of sense.
Shia Leboeuf is a high school super genius/idiot who is specially selected by the US government to lead its secret new anti-terrorism agency, M. I. S. S. I. L. E. C. O. M. M. A. N. D. Despite possessing no apparent skills or abilities, it would seem that only Shia is capable of operating the magical/technological…
@TheFamous1: I have to agree. They asked people about him, and a couple of people said he liked to play video games (as well as listen to music, play the saxophone for a while until he got into drugs, etc...). This article is disrespectful to everyone involved.
@Nahuna: that is a winning shop right there.
@runandgun: Or even worse, who has more money.
@Volkamar: The two games would seem to look ridiculously similar.
@DrForbidden: This is really more a case of someone else trying to lock you out of the home you just bought from them; property law supports this view, and it is in fact legal to hack something you've purchased for the purposes of running your own software on it.
@BigJDawg319: I heard those guys need beer money.
It only does bird-based ground-to-pig missiles.
@DrForbidden: I don't know if you saw that video of the presentation from the guys who hacked the PS3, but apparently its security was really awful in a lot of ways (for example, their public/private keys were generated using a 'random number generator' that always returned the same number, meaning nothing is even…
@Xazi2003: It's not against (American) people's rights that they removed it, nor is it Sony's right to stop people from hacking the thing. That part of the DMCA has been thrashed in court so thoroughly that it would be silly for Sony to attempt any sort of legal action against these guys (which is not to say they…