Have you contacted them and asked for what their position on those are?
Have you contacted them and asked for what their position on those are?
If it's a car of cultural significance, it probably would since you would only be the "holder" of the car, but never the "owner". Of course, this is assuming you have a car that is culturally significant which the majority of people don't. And those that do are usually top gear heads with car enthusiasm running…
No. It was founded as a means of getting money together to be able to make a project, be it an event, product, or something else, possible.
You're right. No ONE can.
Ohhhh, that's the fine print there!
I can understand discrepancies where a sandwich might be 11.9" or what have you, but the argument they're making is that they are being a denied a whole inch. An inch of bread, meat, veggies, sauces, and anything else in the sandwich. You want to get your money's worth, and when it comes to food, you want to make…
You know, if I REALLY wanted to hear someone gripe about Kickstarter and crowd-funded games, I'd read an opinion piece on it. This is not an opinion piece, or at least it wasn't SUPPOSED to be!
You know how at McDonald's, whenever they advertise the Quarter Pounder sandwich that there's always that asterisk in the ads or somewhere on the menu that says:
*Engage Old Man Rant Mode Despite Only Being 30*
COME ON EVERYONE! SING ALONG!
Wasn't there also a thing where Kotaku refused to go by the Metacritic system? I don't recall Kotaku ever giving numbered reviews in the time I've been reading this website. (I could be wrong, but my memory's just not pulling up any examples of when Kotaku gave numbered scores if they ever did.) But wasn't that also…
Ladies and Gentlemen: The Mega Stone.
I drank so many of those when my grandmother spoiled me when visiting her during the summer. To this day, drinking Shasta flavors that match these drinks take me back to a childhood summer so long ago...
I had to be 7 or 8 years old in 1990 when the PowerFest came to Cleveland, OH. I remember going to the Cleveland Convention Center (It's entirely underground; I kid you not) with my Dad and two younger brothers.
I think part of the reasoning might be the marketing that this game saw this past month.
Which reminds me, I still need to get myself a Link Hat for my copy of the game.
Just a little reminder that as we elder gamers are trying to explain to the younger generation why these games were awesome and why they deserve the respect and attention we give them, eventually we'll need to come to understand and learn from the games of their day too.
This is a recent problem that I've been noticing lately with the current generation of game players (and by current I mean those not even 20 years old).
Is that so? Not so sure about that...
You mean like this?