His spurs have spurs. He's the cowboyiest cowboy to ever cowboy.
His spurs have spurs. He's the cowboyiest cowboy to ever cowboy.
After the initial cast of Overwatch was revealed, some folks, like feminist critic Anita Sarkeesian, lamented that the female characters in the team-based shooter were all svelte. Today, Blizzard revealed two new characters, and one of them is a direct response to those types of criticisms.
Don't you mean #FISTworldproblems? I'll see myself out (slams door).
Yeah, as much as I like this character design, the fact that she's a butch Russian strongwoman is forehead-slappingly obtuse.
That other video was straight BS. Batman always wins. Always.
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THREE SIXTY NO SC...oh fuck it.
I've heard that most original developers from BioWare left after the EA acquirement. It's pretty much a husk at this point.
Give me my Simant 2 with third person view and character progression with xp and perks!
DEATH TO THE RED ANTS!
Well shit. Helps if I fully read the article instead of skimming :/
I just imagine a recruiting campaign with the Horde and Alliance trying to get this guy to join them with free gifts.
I'm taking a big shot in the dark here but I'm assuming you don't like this and do not approve whatsoever?
The only thing that doesn't look like an actual IKEA picture is the chairs. Something is off about them.
Pretty soon, we'll start seeing the Unreal logo pop up at the start of movies.
At least, sooner than we'll see the Valve guy pop up at the start of a new Half Life game (heyooo!!)
Steins; Gate, which you apparently haven't seen (or don't remember), and must now watch immediately for the sake of this world line and the next. ;)
Ash isn't even human. We all know that he is a prototype Pokemon created by Oak to handle the wearisome task of pointing devices at Pokemons.
Ash cannot be killed. He has been in a coma since episode one.
Actually, at the time, Dave Gibbons made Dr. Manhattan blue because pink would look like he was a normal human, red would look like he was on fire, green was too Hulk-like, and blue was it. I asked him this directly when we were both guests on NPR's Science Friday when the WATCHMEN film came out. Gibbons said that…