I’ve been expecting a new policy at work for a while... after announcing a “work from anywhere” program that will “never expire”, they’re walking back on it already. Like everybody else. The PS team went first... and everybody else is waiting.
I’ve been expecting a new policy at work for a while... after announcing a “work from anywhere” program that will “never expire”, they’re walking back on it already. Like everybody else. The PS team went first... and everybody else is waiting.
You quite literally couldn’t pay me enough to willingly roll the dice on traumatic brain injury. Five million, or about three and a half after paying a contingent-fee attorney his third, and maybe two after the tax man, might not cover a lot of lifelong medical care either.
I don’t even expect them to try to collect from Microsoft, or any other storefront. It’s clearly a damage control line that they don’t seem to think anyone will actually apply even the most basic legal scrutiny to. I’m sure somebody in Unity’s legal department has drafted and deleted like ten different e-mails to…
Gosh what an absolute business genius John Riccitiello is. “Not only am I causing the long-tail users of our software to run away and probably never come back, we may be getting hit by a class action lawsuit we’ll have to pay out the butt to fight, plus all the bad press you can read! Now give me more money for I am…
“developers like Aggro Crab would not be on the hook, as the fees are charged to distributors, which in the Game Pass example would be Microsoft.”
The extra ‘NICE’ thing about this is that now game installs are weaponized. You hate that a dev made a change in the game you don’t like? People used to review bomb it. Now just set up a script to install then uninstall the game all day long, and share that script with your equally frothing buddies.
It’s also pretty funny to have 2003 be the “early online gaming communities”, because that’s like, two or three years before that whole thing kind of ended, or started rapidly ending. I’d been playing games online regularly since 1996, and talking about games online since 1993, a whole decade earlier. I will say you…
It’s “THEIR sophomore project”. Rookie mistake.
you might be surprised to learn that...
Bethesda’s exclusive partnership with AMD caused a big controversy when it was announced earlier this summer precisely because of the chip company’s pattern of locking out competitors’ features.
It’s because if you give a modern AAA game anything less than a 7 in a review, you get death threats from sycophants and shills who act like you’re personally murdering the devs. The words in the actual review don’t even matter so long as their precious metacritic score isn’t impacted.
The local 5-o is going back to nap time ASAP. They couldn’t give two shits.
It’ll be refreshing to finally see a full-size pickup with a sinister and aggressive appearance.
Who could forget the joy of navigating an all green UI in the early 00s
So glad Armored Core is back
Because that’s exactly what it is, they’re literally just splitting up the content differently. There are some minor differences like apparently being able to do the content in anachronic orders, but let’s face it, barely anyone’s going to do that because they’re going to do the new content as soon as it drops.
What do I feel that this is just a rebrand of the same thing?
I mean, they now own the IP rights to CoD, Crash Bandicoot, Spyro, Skylanders, THPS, Diablo, Warcraft, StarCraft, Overwatch, and Candy Crush to name a few.