ThePalmtopTiger
The Palmtop Tiger
ThePalmtopTiger

A dead publisher/developer won't make a comeback, but then again they wouldn't be persecuting people for illegal downloads if they're no longer in existence. Nintendo, Konami, Capcom, Square-Enix, Sega, and some others survived from the 8 and 16-bit days to the present.

Of course you wouldn't care, you're not Google.

It isn't an ethical issue, but it certainly is a legal one. It might not be in publishers' benefit to pursue the downloader, but Google is a big fish and if they manage to successfully sue then they can make big bucks.

Sure, you can tell me to stop associating myself with a hashtag that has been so successfully hijacked, but think to other movements in history, such as the civil rights movement. If you continually oppress a group, and in this case verbally, then they will be more and more reluctant to give up.

There's a market for $100 9" figures, but those are highly detailed and for series that are actually relevant. While TMNT isn't dead, I don't think that it has enough appeal with adults to really sell anymore. TMNT probably has a lot of appeal among kids since there is a running show, but there's no way that a kid

The lack of head bobbing is a bit disorienting.

Those were darker times.

That seems like a pretty massive flaw in the Crossfire tech. Is AMD working to remedy it or are they just like "*shrug*, if you don't like it then buy Nvidia."

I'm sure there are people who would limit their game like that purely for the retro aesthetic.

I've been using borderless window for some time now, as do the friends I talk to on a regular basis. I know very few serious PC gamers who would rather use fullscreen, so I have to wonder why so many PC games still don't have this feature.

However, the word carried a nuance of disguise and didn't quite capture the spirit of what cosplay had become. In the West the word 'masquerade' could be used to refer to costuming, but when Takahashi and some university friends tried to translate 'masquerade' into Japanese for a magazine article they were writing, it

I'm not opposed to this idea. From a business standpoint it makes a lot of sense, but their reason for changing it is totally bogus. By only allowing you to exchange currency at fixed prices they ensure that you will always have a few gems left over. It's basically like store credit, by leaving you with a small amount

It looks the way I remember it. It upscaled fairly well, but I'm more curious in seeing how Halo 2 looks since it was originally an Xbox game.

We'll see when the DLC actually releases, but at this point I'm really happy with the content that Nintendo has displayed. I'd be interested to see some of the unique items from Double Dash appear in the next DLC pack, but I know that's a long shot.

It looks like it. It isn't on Amazon; too bad, I'd have liked to use my free 2 day shipping.

You're buying Smash Bros. for Wii U, so get a free Amiibo while you're at it. Must add both to cart to see deal. [Smash Bros.]

There's a lot more info that you should know about, but it probably isn't pertinent to this conversation.

At this point both Apple and Macintosh are established brand so people are unlikely to get confused. Even at their inception however, the name "Apple," wasn't uncommon to many people because Apple Records had signed The Beatles. "Apple" was also a word that was commonly used to describe non-fruit things as well e.g.

I ask because over the course of the past six days with the PlayStation TV, I've run into several people who had absolutely no idea. My wife, for starters, thought the PlayStation TV was an actual TV, and expressed surprise when I arrived home from Fedex with a package the size of a small shoebox. Later my nephew, who

Because Roku and Chromecast weren't words before these products came along. "Television," on the other hand, was.