The Dr. Disrespect line is what clued me in that this was sarcastic lmao.
The Dr. Disrespect line is what clued me in that this was sarcastic lmao.
You can also make your point without the unnecessary shot at the commentor’s dick. Or without reinforcing the tired stereotype that having a “small” dick is somehow belittling or a sign of misogyny / projection / whatever.
As much as we keep saying this is just a vocal minority—which I think is debatable, at this point—it’s also up to men who know they aren’t “like that” or want to prove “that’s just a small minority of grognards,” to do their part.
I know this is a goof response, but you really have to understand that jokes like this equate the entirety of a woman’s body as being equally “sexually explicit,” as male genitalia. You’re basically reinforcing the idea that dicks are inherently offensive, while also saying that every part of a naked woman is…
There’s nothing inherently sexual about the human body, tbh. A lot of what we consider to be provocative/taboo, in terms of nudity, comes from like hundreds of years of misogyny, religious conservatism, and the outright anxieties both men and women have about their own bodies.
“They think it’s really sexual because they think a woman’s body is inherently sexual—which it is not,” she said. “Context is a very, very important thing.”
Saw someone play this on YouTube last night, and it looks like one of those great time-killer games—simple, since you’re just giving out three basic commands (Attack, Move, Regroup) but also a bit deep in how you build your swarm and choose to go about each level. You’re right that bosses do look like a chore (at…
Except I can buy pretty decent time-waster to hour-eating games elsewhere for 5$ a month.
Serves me right for writing this in a hurry before taking a shower.
Unfortunately, I feel articles like these will become the norm—as will the sentiment—when game devs and journos keep; 1) giving these services a pass, and giving them positive word of mouth (even if it’s warily) because “the games are fun despite the service model,” and 2) in the case of devs, keep seeing that gacha…
You can bet the people who “hate” the game are just bitter Pokemon fans.
You don’t need to come over into an article not about Pokemon to bitch about Pokemon, ffs.
I’m making the comparison not because I consider Undertale better than the other games you listed (or even better than W3), but because it had, imo, just as much (or more) cultural impact—both to its success and detriment. People to this day still talk about Undertale, still write academic papers on it; it’s still…
My big issue is, essentially, asking the question if it deserves the title of “one of the best video games ever made,” / “best RPG of its generation,” when the competition for the latter is, what—Undertale? And because, in calling it the former: I feel people are coming to that conclusion based more on how we’ve…
We’ll have to agree to disagree.
My big issue is this, tbh.
Step one: realize you will either love or hate the first game, but that it gives you the most freedom in terms of narrative choices.
We all go through this existential dread, once in awhile.
In that case, learn to cherish what you have. Strive to do good, and improve the lives of those around you. Make this life—the only one we get, yeah—matter in whatever ways you best feel you can achieve. Make it so that, if worst comes to worst, you leave this world and those around you better off than they were…
It’s not supposed to be enough, my friend. Not in your case. But, for some, hearing that a random person cares; or seeing a cute image; or just feeling like they’re not alone, even ephemerally, maybe will be enough.