Talgrath
Talgrath
Talgrath

Really they’re problem is they want to be villains but they suck at it.  I seem to recall there are times in the anime when they could really be complete jerks, but just don’t have the evil hearts for it and eventually do the (sort of) right thing.

Cyberpunk wasn’t ever really supposed to be impressive though. Neon signs weren’t new or novel when the genre was invented nor when Blade Runner was made; they were widely regarded as well, what we see them as today: ugly. Blazing beacons of capitalism that intrude on your night time walks whether you like them to or

So Kaepernick still wants to play...why not go to the CFL?  It would kinda be fun to see him light up some scrubs.

Beat the racist team.

Yep, because we definitely don’t see giant neon signs anymore. Certainly not in New York:

So hyped for that game.

A little of column A, a little of column B.

That’s true, it’s not.  But marketing can have an outsized effect on the performance of a product.  My larger point is that Cliff Bleszinski is good at making a particular type of game that needs the backing of a larger apparatus to work correctly.  He doesn’t work as an indie developer because doing the same thing as

What’s sad is that this even had to happen.  Anti-fascism shouldn’t be controversial in America, my grandpa got his leg tore open in World War 2 fighting these assholes,  they don’t deserve a voice and their hate has no place in modern America.

The difference is that with a physical card the value isn’t just because you got the card, it’s the quality of the card and the age that determine value to a collector. A mint-condition Black Lotus from the first edition of Magic: The Gathering can sell for $27,000 at auction; such value factors don’t matter in a

So true about Artifact, they’re pricing it like it’s a physical game instead of an online game.

The stock market in general is down, doesn’t mean that these specific stock dips are due to that.  Activision-Blizzard’s big dip hit after the Diablo Immortal backlash, for example.

Yes, stocks in general are down, but they aren’t as much as 38%, at least not yet. Just because stocks in general are down doesn’t mean that every stock that went down at all is a victim of the general bear market. If you’re trying to play at being a day trader, then you’re missing key details by just saying “down

Right, but the backlash is surely hitting the bottom line, especially thanks to looming legal concerns in the EU.

Wasn’t talking about workers.  Was talking about the backlash and legal trouble relating to the “live services” model which is built around microtransactions and loot boxes.  I’m well aware investors don’t give a shit about workers.

I think it could have. Quite frankly, I was only vaguely aware Lawbreakers existed; you know if this was backed by EA or Activision-Blizzard or Take-Two there would have been a huge media blitz that would have lured at least some folks away from Overwatch.

Given that the general scent of bars with darts is “rotting bloody vomit from alcoholic with a failed liver and a love of cheese” I’m surprised he can smell anything.

I feel like Cliff Bleszinski just can’t make games as an indie developer, he’s very much a “blockbuster” developer that delivers mentally shallow but beautiful games with good controls; you can’t sell people on that without a big marketing budget. There wasn’t really anything particularly novel or interesting about

Not shocked at the decline in stock prices for EA, Activision-Blizzard and Take-Two; the industry is starting to see significant backlash to its scummy practices and that can only mean a decline in profits.  The question is whether or not the industry can properly adapt to the new reality after going in so hard for

I mean, It’s Billy Haisley, of course he’s wrong.