Traipse
wild homes loves you but chooses darkness!
Traipse

Whitson, welcome back! When you left us, it left a hole in the Force.

Looks totally wonderful. So happy to get to return to that world.

I'm beginning to feel the same way. Here in Houston it seems like violent crime is on the rise the last few months. I kind of assume at some point I'll be a gun violence statistic. I still oppose gun proliferation, though, and mostly for this reason: I DO believe that guns, utilised properly, can be a deterrent to

A thousand times this. After Whitson said it, I signed up for the beta and got an invite and oh man Desktoppr is incredible.

PC gaming is great, and should definitely complement the console experience, just as consoles complement the PC. But lauding Steam's biannual sales is more than a bit myopic, because if you're aware of OTHER, awesome PC sales channels that frequently slash prices (Amazon PCDD, Gamefly On Demand, GOG, Green Man, etc.)

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

It's not the best wording, but I'd call it more naive than passive aggressive. GameFly is still doing great business, though— when it comes to consoles it's sort of essential. Digital distribution is great, but on consoles it's unrelentingly expensive.

I can't imagine they'll get far with this argument— realistically there was no-where in the country they could've tried this case hoping for full impartiality— but this blurb doesn't bother me. Am I supposed to feel bad that a criminal is enjoying a zealous effort by his attorney? I hate Sandusky, and I hate what he

Luckily for completionists, Sony seem intent on releasing HD collections of EVERY PS2 SERIES EVER MADE, instead of wasting their time on PS3 games. So we don't need to keep our PlayStation 2 games anymore!

I imagine the conversations had less to do with the size of the sensor (which is nifty, sure, but it's not an inconceivable accomplishment) and more to do with the camera application itself and the oversampling that turns the sensor into something magical. It's hard to understand how amazing the 808 is until you