Considering the guy's license was suspended and the bike wasn't insured, I'm pretty sure this bike is either going to be auctioned or it'll rust at impound. Doubt this nasal-whine guy is gonna find the money to get that bike back.
Considering the guy's license was suspended and the bike wasn't insured, I'm pretty sure this bike is either going to be auctioned or it'll rust at impound. Doubt this nasal-whine guy is gonna find the money to get that bike back.
FarCry3, FarCry2, and SpecOps: The Line were very good about that sort of storytelling.
That's a good argument right there. Thinking on it, the FarCry team's always been pretty good about making you question your protagonist's motives. I know that in FarCry2, I found myself questioning why I'd taken the job to hunt the Jackal down and almost found myself siding with him and almost agreeing with his…
Well, Nazeem from Skyrim was annoying as hell. He's black (Redguard?) and is pretty goddamned privileged. And if not, he's a rich d-bag.
Both are pretty horrible, but at least one was somewhat predictable. You know the old phrase - better the devil you know than the devils you don't.
I hear Ubisoft's bullshit and all I can think is:
PR is a mofo, ain't it?
The poor excuses are embarrassing.
My response to FFVII.
"Forget Call of Duty..."
Hit those fools in the jaw, man.
Not gonna lie, I wouldn't want those two in my hometown and we're nowhere as fancy as the Hamptons. It's not about class or money, it's about not wanting mass media's garbage in my hometown.
I love how the running of the marathon is somehow harmful to recruiting and retention of the athletes. If I was looking at colleges and a coach told me he's still actively running, that to me means the coach is up to date with the times and is still passionate about his work.
The difference between Subaru's and Honda's AWD setups is like night and day. Both in terms of operation and in terms of actual performance, too.
Basically, "all boxer engines are flat, but not all flat engines are boxers".
The thing is the poster is aimed at women when really, men should probably wear shirts with sleeves, collars that aren't down to the bottom of the sternum, and not look like gymrat laundry day.
That would be THE way to handle this. "Professional attire" means everyone.
Redblooded, oversexed American male, speaking specifically about my demographic:
Yup. All You Need is Kill.
I was done with this show midway through the first season...what's described above is basically the show's whole formula, sadly.