Yes
Yes
I don't see what all the rage is about.
No :)
By people, do you mean "people who only game on consoles?"
Disable tessellation and exclusive fullscreen. After you've done this, enable Tomb Raider for offline play and you're good to go.
I'm curious as to what the editorial process is like here, because I've noticed that so many titles of submitted Kotaku articles read like Alcoholics Anonymous or Dear Abby letters, yet they often seem incongruous with the writer-ly and more subtle aspirations of the actual article.
Who's standing up to what now? I'm a coward in the same sense a person being dragged to their spouse's best friend's baby shower has to pretend to like kids. In a social context, why does religion suddenly get some kind of special treatment as a topic?
I'm still myself, as religion already has zero influence on my life and relationships to begin with. The fact of the matter is, atheist or agnostic, I honestly don't care how I label myself. As long as I can give the diplomatic answer and maintain (at the very least) cordial relationships with other people in my…
That's understandable. I just didn't see the point of your comment at first, but after reading your response, I can sympathize with your reasoning and I apologize if I came across as overly hostile or snarky (or both).
Yeah, I know. I mostly wanted to comment on how pointless his comment was in the context of Peter Moore publicly denying the news. "Ah, I have a secret... but I can't tell you" means nothing if you can't prove it and, on top of that, your statement adds nothing to the conversation. It's annoying when those kinds of…
That's a really good way to put it, definitely. I'm not really a fan of labels to begin with (I know, edgy) and that's a label that often engenders negativity in others. I don't really have an agenda, nor do I want a soapbox to stand on. My personal beliefs are just that.
In the past, a lot of devout co-workers I've hung out with got uneasy whenever the mention of God or religion came up when other non-religious co-workers (such as myself) were around. From what I've seen, agnosticism is perceived as a stance of undecided skepticism instead of that militant "I HATE ALL RELIGION"…
I thought the idea was, and still is, interesting, but it looks way too unnatural, like you said.
Skip, I'm curious as to what the true meaning of "treated it right" means in the article's title.
Keep in mind that Reddit is a majority hivemind of atheist group-think that "curates" unpopular opinion by abusing the true purpose downvotes, all under the pretense of a community as well as a functioning argument against true democracy. I'm an atheist (I say agnostic at work to be polite) and I can't stand reddit.
Reminded you of The Descent? I had the same response to it the first time I saw it, too. Also, not-so-quick aside: I was part of a domestic tour group in China, and on one of our many long bus rides, the tour guide decides to put on a random movie from her wallet of bootleg dvds. Guess which one she picked? About ten…
Turning off tessellation is one fix, but I was still crashing after 15 minutes of gameplay (as opposed to the original 2 minutes). I'm on a GTX 660, and here are some other things that I found to help:
How privy are part-time non-exempt QA testers to executive developments?
Is that like how people on this site regurgitate tired cliches in the form of jokes because they have no originality?
Throwing around inaccurate and poorly conceived descriptors from the perch of a professional's throne is fun, too!