Vexorg
Vexorg
Vexorg

Nice... Now how about a GT2 next, if for no other reason than to up the crazy factor...

Nice to see someone's taking the whole "Aerodynamics of a brick" thing literally.

If you bother to read the Blog post, there were multiple run-ins with vicious dogs (not just pitbulls, but other breeds as well) involved here.

OK, someone needs to run one of these in LeMons, screw the inevitable BS laps.

I hear the tutorial takes seven hours to get through, and is unskippable.

The Redshirt: Found mostly in RPGs, spends hours and hours tweaking their perfect character, who promptly gets annihilated by a ridiculously improbably critical in the first round of combat. Every single freakin' time. In board games that involve elimination of players, somehow ends up being the first one out.

I told you that alternative commuting nonsense was trouble waiting to happen...

Already done, back in 2007:

And just how many beauty contests did he have to enter before he finally managed to win second prize in one?

Randy Johnson could not be reached for comment.

Doesn't anyone at MS look at this kind of thing and recall for a moment that roughly the last half-zillion times they tried to pull stuff like this resulted in twice as much backlash as whatever good publicity they might have managed to buy out of it?

Why am I picturing this thing smashed to bits in the corner of the room?

How about Kyle Busch in a turn-6 fender-bender with Kimi?

I don't know, I just bought the one with the cooler looking Pokemon on the box (which would be Y in my case.)

Obligatory.

I've tried getting into the FF Tactics games, but after playing the Disgaea games (especially with attack animations off) the pace of the FFT games just seems absolutely glacial in comparison.

Yes, the movements can randomize the board at times, but if you plan where you move pieces carefully you can generally control things pretty well, it just takes some getting used to. Keep in mind that you have unlimited time between turns, so you can analyze the board and make a plan.

Puzzle Quest has been on a number of different platforms (including PC and pretty much every last-gen console/handheld.) The other ones are iOS/Android only as far as I know.

How is that on iOS? I've still got a jewel-encrusted Alpha account, and stop in every so often to check up on things.

I've been playing Puzzle and Dragons quite a bit lately. Yes it's freemium, and it's admittedly a bit of a grindfest (and paying won't do much to help that since even if you pull a whole team of gods out of the random egg machine you won't be able to use more than one at a time until you rank up some) but it's a