PolicromaSol
PolicromaSol
PolicromaSol

Seriously ginormous high five to you!

It's pretty accurate. I have a black cat that is part Siamese, and you can see it in how she moves and acts, even though from a distance she's just a plain black cat.

That cat's got some savannah blood in him methinks. :) Huge, high-jumping tabbies.

Nah, it does. It pulled off some pretty impressive graphical stunts, such as full battlefields of battling orcs and elves.

Yeah, I feel for her. I was mad in Mabinogi when a skill book I was enchanting nuked my progress back to the beginning when I picked up the wrong enchantment. I thought it would error or just plain not work if that sort of mistake was made.

Well, bots are only one of many possibilities. Think about how games like Nintendo's Animal Crossing New Leaf use cloud servers to spread user-created content all over the place. Nifty, right? Now, Nintendo has the money to do this, but what about basement developer #36? Imagine your favorite small-time developer

What I'm seeing is that they've added a general feel of humidity to the surroundings. It's not as clean and crisp-looking as the original, but at the same time, probably gives better atmosphere. These people live in a very wet world. Of course it'd be humid.

You don't have to live in New York to make streetpass work. Nor do you have to go to gaming conventions.

The "American Dream" is real, just greatly misunderstood due to being hijacked by a myriad of increasingly socialist politicians. Not to mention in danger of dying, at least in America.

Yes, there *are*. You can buy steam games on disk. Then use your code. Whoops, that's it, you're done. And nobody can buy it from you or reuse it.

I strongly suggest you take a look at your cell phone plan. I know for a fact that Verizon Wireless has been heavily pushing their customers toward a plan that gives everyone on it tethering, and the vast majority of phones pushed by the major carriers right now support it as well.

When the 360 came out, I found myself practically in love with a game called Tales of Vesperia. It was hugely popular in Japan, to the point of selling 360s. Apparently, this had been developed for the 360 due to Microsoft's tech support for developers, and there not having been any other HD systems out at the time.