Until more people think like I do then I will never stop. Your weird interpretation of anything being edgy is your own issue though. I’m holding the author to their own standard.
Until more people think like I do then I will never stop. Your weird interpretation of anything being edgy is your own issue though. I’m holding the author to their own standard.
You should care about portrayals, but the point here is that they’re picking a very dumb fight.
No. Couldn’t be. That would mean his character were tragic. If only that concept existed!
I completely agree that this type of issue is bullshit but it’s stupid to talk about how there’s a robot and therefore nothing can be talked about ever. That’s a non-sequitur.
I completely agree, and would add that the same crowd complaining wants more from characters like Symmetra. At the same time, they only tell stories through design. The whole point to Sigma’s story is that he was almost obliterated by a black hole, perceives reality differently, and is being used and abused by the…
Likely someone who’s diagnosed but otherwise presents as typical.
If you’re so offended then why did you call him Sigma? That’s his patient name. Please use his real name from here on out and never call him something so offensive again.
Apples to oranges. Both fruit, still different.
The irony of writing a piece on mental illness (from space magic) and calling him Sigma throughout - and not once did you call him by his real name. Just Sigma, Sigma, Sigma. Please have some compassion for the fictional Dr. Siebren de Kuiper and use his real name. Or are all fictional patients just numbers and…
I’ve already commented that I don’t even think esports are genuine but the ad was at least somewhat well written and delivered. The Red Bull fridge gag was pretty alright.
This reads like your own entry in Encyclopedia Dramatica. The idiots at Kotaku in Action couldn’t have painted a worse caricature.
You’re butchering your own point and offering that up like it’s something I said. Even weirder.
You can’t separate the style from the message. If their message doesn’t really concern anything else, not for ignorance but for focus in vision, then I really hope it doesn’t. Unless they’re directly making fun of characters like Jeremy Jamm on Parks and Rec.
What kind of a response is that? Golf is a very old sport that right now takes up too much land and absolutely is landscaping gone too far in many cases. You can’t defend golf in 2019. Soccer was also invented before kickball so that doesn’t even make sense.
That’s like rating Mario Party based on the fact that you can play it solo, or saying Monopoly isn’t any fun because it’s too easy to win with just one player.
Funny enough I learned stick on a Corvette. My dad was proud to train me right and took driving safety seriously. He was prouder having me drive it than having one. Guess people have shit dads or lead lives where they can’t be trusted. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
It should be fine to criticize the game for being co-op if that’s not your thing, given that some people may not be able to access the full experience as easily, but the game should be judged on its merits when tested cooperatively. As in, don’t play it solo and critique it, but definitely critique it for being co-op.
I don’t know about A Way Out but the article says that if you get the deluxe edition (for $40 instead of $30) then you get a pass. I presume the emphasis is on one pass. You can spend 1/3 the price to have another friend join you, or you can play with randoms perhaps, or just other people who own the game, but you…
I still don’t recognize eSports as anything but LAN parties taken too far and a huge waste of time, but that video was surprisingly well done.
If I’m not mistaken - if you have a copy of the game lying around now, I believe you can input any Blizzard game into their launcher and just get it available there. It ties the game to your account like a physical box might. Unless that was only one game or something - but people should try.