Pizookie
Pizookie
Pizookie

You mean like how Sony's been doing this since day one with PS+ with their 60-minute free trials on dozens of games as a PS+ subscriber? This is Microsoft following suit, and admittedly upping the ante with whole day trials. This is why we can't just give companies our money willy nilly (NONE OF THEM). We demand

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Not that that matters, it is still a multplatform game with no mention or even a logo for the other versions... but since you want more.

how the fuck is he a misogynist?

Slipping on seagull shit, doing pullups to increase strength, confusing guards with the box, pinup models on posters that you could kiss, funny codec moments, a giant fat guy in a bomb suit on rollerblades.

"I need Scissors! 61"
*Points to headband* "Unlimited ammo"
Naked blonde guy running through the halls holding his crotch and doing cartwheels

The silliness is the best thing about this game. I am tired of gritty pseudo realistic crap almost every other game company spits out.

You must be new to corporate double speak but that paragraph is an exact example of that.

Nope, Sony have only ever said "first on Playstation". Never "Only on Playstation".

As you can see, there are now a lot of upset Xbox fans not getting a exclusive game...

Exact same thing..? DLC, compared to a full game, is the exact same thing..?

As you may have seen, we've just announced that Rise of the Tomb Raider, coming Holiday 2015, is exclusively on Xbox.

Well, there that is. To the surprise of very few.

It's Kotaku vs. Polygon. Gawker vs. Vox Media Smash Bros Melee DX Plus Alpha II Turbo. NYC vs. DC. (LETS GO CAPS) Featuring an article by a former Kotaku-ite no less, Brian Crecente!

And that's the point because I looked yesterday and FFXIII-2 was 14.99 for 90 days. So they are still changing pricing. The old price was 29.99 but that was changed a while ago to $19.98 then to 14.99 now back to 29.99 (I guess Im not home to check today). But I've been in the beta since like January, if that makes

Thank you for arguing semantics and trying to discuss the technical legitimacy of an oft-used and well understood term with generally agreed upon and concise connotations. Your attempt to confuse the issues of both language, and racial politics, will surely bring much both to this article, and American society as a