Traipse
wild homes loves you but chooses darkness!
Traipse

Mass production does not equal creation.

Not sure if serious.

I was on board until I saw the Nexus 4 in a drawer. DACHIS Y U NO ORB? Seriously, that thing is beautiful. Some devices— and their chargers— are made to be seen.

The rule should ALWAYS be, do not buy what you are considering and just buy a bike instead. Don't need an extension to tell you that.

$2 every month adds up. In a year that's more than a $25 difference figuring the additional tax. So the real question is, if you're interested in the service why WOULDN'T you want to do it right now?

If you use Android— and, more specifically, are invested in Google's ecosystem— then All Access is rad. It's even tied into Now, informing you early about new releases and local shows by artists you've played on AA. The G+ integration is OK, if you're into that. The selection is pretty decent, and the UX— while

Best way to say goodbye.

The game gets significantly better with friends. And fewer friends will be playing it by the time the GOTY arrives. Aaaaaand, it won't really be a much better deal than this. So buy it already! EXPLOOOOSIONS!

There's a lot of really beautiful stuff on Instagram. Unfortunately, there is also a metric ton of garbage. And from browsing, it looks like the video feature— so far— is really, really prone to being abject garbage. I wonder if it's the length that makes it more likely to be crap? I mean, the six seconds you get on

When was the last time Congress listened to the people, man? That's all special interests at work. If anything, this is the polar opposite of a democracy, hahaha. Cheers!

Except that Microsoft's largest sales— by quite a formidable margin— come within the United States. They lost Europe to Sony this generation, and Japan is a pipe dream— it's launching a full year after the other regions. While it's not necessarily the most prudent plan, slowly launching around the world as you've

Not sure if serious.

The potential to do things they've said they're not going to do? Yes, it is still there. That is the nature of potential, my friend. It's there even if you decide to abandon it. Which they've done, and announced that they've done. But yes. Potential. I see this mentioned a lot, the whole Microsoft can just rework the

I don't think the word 'considered' in this instance means what you think it means.

It might be pessimistic, but answer me this: without going to because the current markets are saturated and sales are declining, why are there new consoles being released? Without new technology that leads to new experiences, this generation is a very, very minor upgrade— the systems aren't rendering at increased

I agree. I'm not buying the PS4 either, yet— I will eventually, for both of them, but for now they're just new underpowered consoles relative to the PC. I was really excited about the One, because savvy gamers were already lining up their groups in such a way that they'd be paying for roughly one-tenth of the games

For myself, you're right. I'll have all three eventually, already have a Wii U (named it Dusty). But for a lot of people, there will be just one next-gen console under the TV. And so to an extent, it really does matter how you come out of the gate. Stumbling badly can really hurt you, so much that you can't right the

I just don't get it. Most of the complaining, if the Internet seems to be a decent vertical slice, is coming from people who wouldn't be impacted by the DRM at all— people who live in the first world, with always-on Internet access. They would've benefited immeasurably from the future tech Microsoft were planning on

A new console, at launch, is almost by definition a first-world product. And while you can import it or get the wildly overpriced implementation available in your nation, people in places like South America, the Middle East, and lower Asia get the shaft, and have for generations. The One, as designed, simply had the

I didn't miss anything. I get why people buy used, and trade in: because it's cheap. I already stated that I understood the First Sale doctrine, but that I believe we have a slightly greater, more adult role to play in helping to ensure the developers we like get the chance to make games. Your response seems more like