I'm not going to actually read this crap so.... ARE YOU FUCKING SERIOUS? Haha!
Bioware, give him a job. As a floor sweeper.
I'm not going to actually read this crap so.... ARE YOU FUCKING SERIOUS? Haha!
Bioware, give him a job. As a floor sweeper.
I'm right there with you man. This guy could have wrote his own 400 page story but instead piggy backs off of somebody else's work and insults them in the process. It also infuriates those of us who liked how ME3 turned out and still to this day don't get all the hate surrounding it. The whole entitlement argument,…
You're not the only one.
I've seen this kind of thing done in a respectful way w/ other games, but the controversy surrounding the ending for ME3 makes me inclined to agree w/ you. I get the feeling that this guy is 1 of those d-bags we had to listen to for a year after ME3 came out, clamoring for everyone at Bioware to kill themselves.
yeah it's pretty annoying, its the entitlement of fans today. Especially when you consider if they would put this much effort into their own ideas they might be able to get their own project off the ground.
Did anyone else read the sentence for Extant as "Halle Berry as a woman who is SPAAACE PREGNANT!!"
"Why were you late for work?"
Person of Interest, because of Michael Emerson's voice and I really like the VFX in the new opening sequence.
"My name is John Crichton, an astronaut. Three years ago, I got shot through a wormhole. I'm in a distant part of the universe, aboard this living ship of escaped prisoners... my friends. I've made enemies. Powerful, dangerous. Now, all I want is to find a way home... to warn Earth. Look upwards, and witness the…
Or
Shame it wasn't modelled after a Dreamcast. Then you could just say you were playing Power Stone.
Why? It's a little flying robot that's GPS enabled. Not super expensive, and I'm sure they'll only let you use it for lightweight items.
That was the first Discworld I read, and still my favorite :) I saw it on a friend's coffee table, picked it up, and couldn't put it down. He had already finished it, I didn't abscond with it while he was still reading.
I want this story on the frontpage tomorrow!
Sorry, I know it is not apropos, but it is what went through my mind.
I've only seen the movie once, so I can't confirm this... I read that the station is spinning, so centrifugal force was pulling him out.
Last week I was on the CBS Morning Show discussing "Gravity" science, and then even I admitted that this was an "Oops." I've seen the film only once, surprisingly, but initially I had to agree with this assessment.
Starting to change my thinking on this, though.
I've read posts by others (who aren't adverse to film…
This is a must know. Physics seemed to work fine everywhere else but at this point. I know that astronauts on the ISS do experience micro gravity, but it isn't enough to keep the line taut like that.
This is something I want to know as well. How do the physics work in this scene?
Thank you. This was my only (potential) problem with the film. Can't wait to hear the response.