Much of the pollution is coming from Guandong.
Much of the pollution is coming from Guandong.
This sort of pricing model only makes sense if there's a simple way to activate and deactivate the billing, depending on whether you have time to play in each particular month.
Perhaps it's particular to DongBei. It seems the norm there.
Indeed. Especially for those of us that aren't solely based in one country. And especially for handhelds.
I guess that's because Chinese would never step on the floor with bare feet.
This is a real issue.
Why would it be banned?
You do realise Australia's game censorship laws were overturned last year, right?¿
What is "next gen" about an upgraded EyeToy?
No mention of the Mainland Children's TV show "帽兒山的鬼子兵 (Devil soldiers in Mao-er Mountain)"?
If you're trying to justify an argument by saying: "I'm right because an imaginary man who lives in the sky said so", you automatically lose all credibility.
The reason gun-related fatalities in Australia are so low is partially because of the way gun ownership is now regulated.
As a gamer who moves around a lot, this really annoys me... and just discourages me from buying games while I'm overseas.
This is the way Kotaku has always been. It's a mix of gaming culture, Japanese culture and general nerd culture.
With this announcement, I think the Doomsday Clock just got moved one minute closer to midnight.
I really enjoyed the first few in the series. They were great games, and I have fond memories of playing them in my University days.
Honestly, I prefer fixed-viewpoint, pre-rendered backdrops to full 3D.
Wow. So there was a whole lot of hype about Fan Bingbing being in the film, she appeared in the trailer (at least the Chinese one), and then she basically just walks down a hallway and says two lines?
At every gaming shop in the world during the past six months:
That reminds me of this spoof of New Zealand's tourism campaign.