Tobbi
Tobias
Tobbi

Wow, it seems as if vine still only supports RC4 chiphers to encrypt the connection. It is very likely that the NSA is capable to decrypt it in real time. Even Microsoft discourages the use of RC4 since November.

I would like to know how many Wii U owners don't own also a PS3, XB360 or PC. If you are a fan of Nintendo consoles/games and if you were interested in third party games in the last 6 years, you probably own a PS3, XB360 or PC.

better than SecuROM.

SecuROM was just DRM and as far as I remember, everyone hated it. At least Origin allows me to redownload a game as often as I want and it provides cloud synchronization for safe files.

While nazi symbols are tollerated in movies in a historical or artistic context in Germany, they are still not tollerated in video games. The German version of the upcoming Wolfenstein game for example will contain fictional nazi symbols instead of the real ones.

I know that you aren't bashing and yes, they used different standards here in Germany in the past. Valve had to change the color of blood in Half Life 2 and Portal for example, but some years later all three Dead Space titles bot an 18+ rating without having to cut anything out of the singleplayer (they had to cut the

I know that you aren't bashing and yes, they used different standards here in Germany in the past. Valve had to change the color of bloodnin Half Life 2 and Portal for example, but some years later all three Dead Space titles bot an 18+ rating without having to cut anything out of the singleplayer (they had to cut the

This is neither the fault of German law nor of EU law. It's an marketing decission. The publisher wants an 16+ rating instead of an 18+ rating, because then they can sell it to people who are 16 or older instead of only to people who are 18 or older.

This isn't censorship, this is a marketing decission. They could have left the content in the game without getting any problems with European law. The game would have gotten an 18+ rating from PEGI and from the German USK but that wouldn't have any consequences besides that they couldn't sell the game to teenagers

Ok, this is obviously self cencoring for marketing reasons. They did it to get an 16+ rating both from PEGI and the German USK. But it is neither mandatory nor common practise to not sell 18+ rated games in stores in the EU or in Germany.

If a society desided that most of it's members should be allowed to have guns, it has to accep, that there will be more gun related crimes than in a society, which only allowes a small group to have guns under heavy restricitons.

On the one side there are people who say the combination of mental illness and violent video games would cause shootings, on the other side we have a tv host defending there decision giving her 13 years old son an M rated game.

No one in this video mentioned, that the combination of mental illness and having access to guns doesn't look like a good idea. Interesting.

On a PC you would have to install a bootmanager, if you haven't one on your system yet. This would work then like this:

You can have as many OSs as you want on a PC. In some cases you would need a dedicated hard drive for an OS, if there are conflicts with the bootloaders. In that case you would just boot an OS by booting from the corresponding hard drive in your BIOS/UEFI

So, there is the problem? Sony, Mircosoft and Nintendo are making their first party games exclusive to their hardware and their operating system all the time. Of course Valve could say, that their future games will only run on SteamOS. But that doesn't mean, that all other publisher will do that. EA and Ubisoft for

I live in Germany, I never saw a door that opens outwards in a private home.

Battlefield 3 is already a 20GB download on pc. If you count up the map dlcs, it's 30GB