SacredByte
SacredByte
SacredByte

@William Henry Harrison: The biggest issue I have is that most of the time, they want us to pay 60 dollars for a mediocre 3 hour experience.

@landoljackson: Shit, I only got about 20 minutes into Bioshock before I put it down...

@Panterabread: You don't have to do any of the sidequests when you play Oblivion; You can ignore everything but the story quest if you really want to...

@SEX_BISON: Shit, I finished ME2 twice in a row too; The first time being a single, nearly uninterrupted (food and bathroom only) 24 hour play session.

@Darigaazrgb: What I hate about the "good/evil" mechanic of ME is the moral relativism.

@MrQuu: "ME2 to me was a cliche...story expertly presented along side of some awesome gameplay and pacing."

@TPL2008: "I generally finish most games with a plot and explored every detail, ending etc. at least once. "

@HardRojo: I got most of the way through AC and got to the point where I was doing the EXACT same thing, again and again, and it was just getting boring.

There's a difference between the validly defined "Assault Rifle" which I quoted the definition of (check wikipedia if you doubt me), and the FUD term "Assault Weapon" as defined in the 1994 Federal AWB.

It's times like these when I tend to agree with Penny Arcade's complete internet dickwad theory...

The issue is that it should never have happened to begin with; The laws on the books should have prevented it.

"You say it's about Copyrighted numbers, when everyone including yourself knows fully well that it is about the code used to unlock the system"

@Ducky: Well played, sir.

@truthtellah: The win in that video is CLEARLY the jab at 3D.

@darkside31337: The issue I see is that it is obviously a fishing expedition, and as such, no judge should have allowed it.

@Paacman: "...to be honest, if you are against Sony on this one, you are an idiot..."

@Kellen: The issue is that, whether or not GeoHot violated the DMCA (I'm not really inclined to open that can of worms), Sony appears to be arguing instead that it owns exclusive rights to a series of numbers that GeoHot published on his blog.

@EmeraldStorm: The root of the issue is that an individual, using the work of others as his starting point, calculated and then released a series of numbers, or keys, on his blog.

@AJ: The issue is with Sony's overly broad interpretation of what they can copyright.