TrueMad
TrueMad
TrueMad

While I get where you’re coming from, the fact that it is an annual release should (in a way) make you even more cautious. I say that because anything that is updated annually has to justify itself, usually by making relatively significant changes. Sometimes even changing things for the sake of change.

Honestly, for that specific scenario you’re much better off downloading the Airline’s app and turning on notifications. In my experience, airline app notifications are near real-time vs. twitter which could be delayed.

On the contrary, GameStop bought a successful retail company, and instead of using it to rebound they ended up killing it by making the same idiotic decisions that put them in the position they’re in now.

Add to that they probably thought that $2 billion investment was going to happen and make up for all the spending. Instead they gambled and lost.

The article and language in the lawsuit seem to imply they knew the DLC was not available at launch. Otherwise they likely would have sued sooner.

And then turn around and sue them over $20? Not likely in this instance.

In fact, Plaintiff did not even play KotOR after purchasing it, instead choosing to wait until the Restored Content DLC was released.

Museum kind of implies tourism, which wouldn’t be happening. So it would just be in the way, and likely have to constantly be adjusted to maintain that orbit.

50 miles sounds like a lot, but he was in a jet. And we don’t know what speed he was flying at when he ejected. It’s possible the jet could have covered that 50+ miles in a matter of seconds between the time he ejected and it finally crashed.

That’s still less than 12 hours total play time, and having to charge every two days is still too frequent. You can go weeks without having to charge an Xbox controller.

Actually does bring up an interesting question for those who still have payments on their vehicles. Hopefully they can work out something with the lender to pause until this gets sorted out

The number of people who could figure this out, let alone running networking setups at home that would even allow them to accomplish this, has to be less than 1% of the active player base.

Twitch star Kai Cenat, who recently became the most subscribed creator on the streaming platform,

Oh you’re right. Even in a newer installations I’ve seen they still use those batteries.

The number of new EVs with only 10k miles that are total loses because the batteries caught fire are very, very high.

They’ve been around since 2012, but they didn’t do anything to put themselves on the radar until recently. That and crypto currency wasn’t something the SEC was worried about until the last 2 - 3 years.

Depends on the mod. Paddles are the equivalent of remapping buttons, which falls under accessibility. Same with controllers like the adaptive controller.

I was wondering the same thing. I block ads and trackers at the network level for all devices in my home, so part of me wonders if this would even function.

Probably should have said subdivision instead of neighborhood. In the area I’m in now (southeast US), it’s not unusual to see small “subdivisions” of 5 - 7 houses, usually in a cove configuration.

This seems like a short sighted argument. Xbox was never marketed as an emulation console, and the percentage of people who bought an Xbox strictly for emulation is likely zero. Because for the same amount of money you can get something else that isn’t at risk of being outright blocked.