agentnein
AgentNein
agentnein

Didn't all the PC platformers sort of control like garbage?

That's because a lot of them were bad.

To be fair, the only way Mighty No 9 got away with it is because Keiji Inafune was in charge of it. If it had just been some random people, no one probably would have cared. If they convinced Shigesato Itoi to do this, they could get away with calling it something else and charging, but it probably wouldn't sell

Sweet jesus

My friend was doing roadie work for a different band that was playing after 30 Seconds. As she was walking through the club, someone smacked her ass HARD. She whips around and it was smarmy, douchey Jared Leto. He put his band's sticker on my friend's ass. She told him off but Jared just shrugged and walked away.

This reminds me of the time I saw Lord of the Rings and then I started summoning giant walls of water to expel ring wraiths from Rivendell.

One of my housemates is working on a game right now, on a volunteer basis. You're probably not familiar with that "v"-word since it doesn't appear in Atlas Shrugged, so let me explain it: He is being paid nothing. The same is true for the other person working on the project. It's not some huge epic project, mind you,

1) It came out

I see that in a discussion about Kickstarter failures we have left out the elephant in the room, so to speak. A certain elephant called Frequency...of the Feminist variety, if you understand my meaning. While I shall not name names, I think we all know of whom this dark Spectre of Unethicalness is.

Gee, it's almost like investing money in a product that doesn't exist yet being made by a brand new company that doesn't really know the first thing about running a business isn't something you should have 100% confidence in.

Its only a matter of time before someone is killed because of this.

All swatters should be charged with attempted murder.

THERE ARE BEAVER BUTTS IN YOUR ICE CREAM

Rule of Rose had a ton of flaws, but the things that worked were amazing. I got the bad ending first and raged, but the true ending absolutely broke my heart. The "Because you didn't love me..." scene was gutwrenching.

The definition has become irrelevant over time. The basic definition would usually end up being animation that was created in Japan. However, due to the existence of manhua and manhwa (chinese and korean manga) this over time would then be further classified as animation that's created in Asian cultures.

From my experience in Japan, I found that when people spoke of anime, they just meant any animation or cartoon.

The most honest answer to this is: there's no consensus.

Keep in mind that if your definition of anime is "a cartoon animated in Asia," then technically The Simpsons, Family Guy, and all those other popular prime-time animated series qualify as anime. They're key framed in America and then sent to animation studios in South Korea to do all the in-between work.