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It’s also an easy way to help them shift their business focus. A few months ago during a retailer conference, DC told all retailers they will be focused on more stand alone stories. They noted their trade paperback sales are still very strong for stand alone stories like Watchmen and The Dark Knight Returns. So

DC closed their New York offices to relocate everything to Burbank, to be closer to the WB studios and make the logistics for everything easier. This was going to take months, and in order to prevent any gaps from their publishing side, they wrote Convergence in advance, so that the stories for Convergence would be

Not as much smog as mainland China.

Both Rage and Borderlands were likely more influenced by the Mad Max series, rather than the other way around. Also, this movie had a long history in development hell, with the idea occurred at 1998. With many false starts, they didn’t really start officially scout for locations until 2009. But the one thing that was

Ahahahahaha... Oh wait they were serious?

I saw Kenny Baker [aka R2D2] walking around during SWCA. I noticed him, but thought it was rude to go up to him during his break. I think everyone else didn’t notice him because he was too short...

I didn’t doubt Lynn Varley, the colorist, might get a few pages, you you referred the 3rd collaborator to the “writer.” I think the term you meant was the letterer. The writer is the person who writes the script. That would be Frank Miller. The Letterer, John Costanza, and one of the best in the industry, is the one

Wait, how could he have split The Dark Knight Returns art 3-ways? Frank Miller was the writer and artist, and Klaus Janson was the inker.

I just got back from GameStop. There were only 12 people ahead of me. It took almost 3 hours to pre-order Ness. The system was so slow, it took 10 minutes per person. The only reason the line wasn’t longer was because the time took too long 1/2 the people had a leave.

How about the time when the Dream Team assembled for Chrono Trigger?

For the longest time no one wanted that game. I bought it on release day, but at the time it got middling reviews, and was largely unsold. It was so bad, Capcom's booth at Comic-Con had hundreds for sale at $5 for a new copy. At the end of the convention, it was largely unsold. Wish I had the foresight to buy a

They added it after my post. I didn't see it listed, which was why I replied with the full slate and cited my source.

Here's the full DC movie schedule according to the investor presentation that's still going on right now:

2016:
Batman v Superman
Suicide Squad

2017:
Wonder Woman
Justice League

2018:
The Flash
Aquaman

2019:
Shazam
Justice League 2

2020:
Cyborg
Green Lantern

Source: http://deadline.com/2014/10/kevin-…

For this gen, I easily spent the most on the WiiU. Here's the breakdown:

Wii U 32GB Deluxe Set w/ Nintendoland = $300

PS4 ($400)

One-Year PlayStation Plus Membership ($30 discounted)

Nintendo published it sure. But most of the game was already developed when Ninja Gaiden 3 [vanilla] was published and there were no indications that Nintendo solely funded teh project. Their agreement probably meant the Nintendo ports would be published by Nintendo. With Bayonetta 2, the development appeared to be

They tried to get this game published by Sega and others, but only Nintendo showed interest. Nintendo funded and published this game, while Platinum developed it. Unless Nintendo allows one of the games they paid to have developed and published, it's not likely to see a port elsewhere.

I don't know. $40 for an adapter and controller seems like a reasonable price. I mean, the WiiU Pro Controller is $50 by itself, and almost all controllers are at least $50 nowadays.

Me and a few of my friends own a PS4 for the games. It's as easy as that. Once their major games are released, we'll all be buying their games. Not sure why it's so hard to understand that.