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@madammina: Lol, if they're going to be ambiguous about it, then I'm going to have to let me imagination go wild... A new video game? A new TV series? A new ride at Disney World? A device that automatically beams an image of Darkwing Duck saying "Let's get dangerous!" into the minds of anyone who is about to do, or

@madammina: Now if they'd only finish releasing the series on DVD...

@madammina: Totally! I still can't believe these are actually coming out, or how close to the original show they are. I hope this series runs for a very long time.

@GumbyX: Ah, I guess you're right. I'm glad I never tried to play through one of those games in Japanese just to get a legit Mew...

I could be wrong, but wasn't mew originally a gift for players or the original Japanese red/green versions who collected all 150 of the other Pokémon? I think they gave him out with the diploma you can get in Celadon city in the original version. But in the American version they shafted players by only giving them the

Hey, that's the Jacob K. Javits Center! I remember sitting right by where they shot the first photo while waiting for it to open at last years anime convention. I was there to compete in the World Cybergames Nationals for Virtua Fighter 5. Lol, good times.

That's awesome, but when do we get the Simpson arcade game? There should have been a home version of that ages ago (could have easily been done on the SNES).

@Luke Plunkett: I thought the loved/hate bullet points always seemed a bit too arbitrary. I felt like I was getting a good feel for the reviewer's opinion, but the points themselves were so subjective that I had a hard time filtering out legitimate gripes from personal bias. Of course I've never read a review that

@JumpyJacks: The trailer is better, but there are a few things you need to keep in mind. Firstly, all the animator of that trailer did was copy S&K with better graphics. He didn't actually create new levels, that had to live up to the standards of people heavily influenced by their nostalgia for classic Sonic games.

Well, well, well, what a difference a few months make. Who would've though that twenty years later, the kids that grew up playing Sonic would be the ones telling Sega how to make Sonic games. And doing a pretty good job of it from the looks of things. I'm still not sure if this new Sonic game will be in the same

How about giving them a choice between Ultima IV and Nethack? Odds are after a few hours with the later, they'll be all too happy to switch over to the lesser of two evils.

"According to Sony, some counterfeit controllers could possible 'ignite or explode'."

@VyseTheQuick: Lol, thanks for the vote of confidence. But actually, a lot of people understand the truth about the US's economic and political relation the China. I'm not sure our current president did at first, but he learned quickly after this: [www.washingtonpost.com] That story didn't make much of a dent in the

@nczuma: Right, well that's basically what I was saying. We are in another mutual assured destruction scenario, but this time it's economic in nature. So really, we just have grin and bear it with the Chinese. And hopefully over time we can negotiate for more respect of human rights in China. Better yet, maybe in time

@BadassSailor: That was more or less political appeasement. It still happens all the time. Of course down there, that's not even the least of peoples' worries. Just look at these... (note: linked site contains NSFW material of the anime variety)

@Spilt_Milk: People overestimate the impact of the US's debt to China. They need to keep buying our bonds just as badly as we need to keep selling them. A fallout of the US economy would be just as bad for them as it would be for us. After all, if the US economy went down, we'd take down half the world economy with

@scaught78: The US government could solve this right now by putting tariffs on Chinese imports to keep their cost in line with their domestic rivals. That's about the only way it's going to happen. It would also have a very large and immediate impact on employment in the US, which is sorely in need of a boost. It

@donthizz#1: That's not necessarily true. As manufacturing costs follow a reverse supply/demand curve (the more demand for supply of something there is, the less it costs to manufacture per unit), the Chinese market's advantage in manufacturing is likely inflated by robust demand. In other words, by eking out a