Sweetz
Sweetz
Sweetz

I respect and even applaud anyone's decision not to play violent video games. My favorite console games are the Ratchet and Clank series, which while obviously still involving plenty of shooting, are cartoony, lighthearted, and generally nowhere near the level of violence in a typical "dude shooter". As I got older

Everyone that I know that's a regular PC gamer, including myself, bought Alpha Protocol when it was $2.00 on Steam. Because it was $2.00! Everyone that I know that bought Alpha Protocol at that price, including myself, has yet to actually play it. :)

Now playing

I'm pretty sure Winky is inspired by the Chevron claymation commercials of the late 90s. These commercials were in turn heavily inspired by the design style of Nick Park, the guy who does Wallace and Gromit.

Yeah as others have said, like a museum piece it will only go up in value. Also like a museum piece, it will rarely see the outside of its display case, making it one of the most pointless cars in the world.

Tron 2.0 is a great game, but I wouldn't say it has a great story, and I don't really think it would have worked as a movie this day in age. Evil corporation sending troopers into computers to take over the world seems a bit 1980s cheesy to me.

Also even if Tron 2.0 had used the Q3 engine, it still wouldn't have been one of the first. Quake 3 came out in 1999. By 2003, there had already been several popular games to use the engine including: Jedi Knight 2, Soldier of Fortune 2, Medal of Honor: Allied Assault, and Return to Wolfenstein.

Might wanna get that memory checked. Tron 2.0 was a Monolith Productions game and hence used the Lithtech engine. It also came out near the end of 2003, at which point 3Dfx was already defunct and most gaming PCs at the time would have been running some flavor of GeForce or Radeon cards. In fact, you couldn't run

Yes I know. Major joke comprehension fail dude.

"I'm all for freedom of expression, but you know, [sometimes it's ok to deny freedom of expression]"

Previous versions, including 2009, *were* sold on Steam, but they weren't Steamworks games. 2012 was just the first year they required Steam. So there goes that theory...

The Enterprise has more effective shields and photon torpedoes and with a well executed Picard maneuver would easily take out a Star Destroyer.

OK, this will probably make me play Skyrim again. Screw vampires, I was so disappointed when I found out the first DLC centered around them.

I cross-shopped a C30 and a GTI about 2 years ago. Ended up with the GTI (mk6).

Pardon me while I NERD RAGE! IT'S NOT A HOLOGRAM, it's just a 2D projection onto glass. People standing on the left side see the exact same image as people standing on the right side. If you were standing at an extreme angle to the screen it would look just as skewed and flat as a normal movie projection. It has

So how do all of us that work in the business software industry manage to get jobs based on experience? Last time I looked the warehouse management app I work on doesn't have credits - not really worried about if I need to look for a job elsewhere. Google doesn't have credits, programmers there must really be

The iPad screen is glass, not plastic. Unless your cat has metal claws, it's pretty unlikely to scratch it.

Wheatley looks appropriate because that's more or less an animated version of Stephen Merchant there. That is not meant as some kind of slight though, this is absolutely amazing and incredibly well done.

This is some pretty amazing craftsmanship, but why did they choose a company name that only a teenager would think is cool?

Gumpert should be on the list of course. Not failed quite yet, but they filed for insolvency so...

What "people" are you referring to? Because "people" at large never had a chance to determine what they thought of it. Aptera's failure is text book case of a promising concept being ruined by god awful management and planning.