It's a piece of art in-game, not a character's body. To invoke Magritte, it's not a penis, it's a piece of limestone.
It's a piece of art in-game, not a character's body. To invoke Magritte, it's not a penis, it's a piece of limestone.
I think making things more difficult traditionally acts as a deterrent and reduces instances. This is why we have laws at all. By the way, this goes for both purchasing and selling - it's not just about people having second thoughts about buying guns, but having second thoughts about who they're selling them to and…
Well no - a person can *try," but I'd rather a psychopath walk into a school or a movie theater with a hammer than a hand grenade any day. No one is claiming that the problem isn't dangerous people - the problem is that there are things we can do to keep certain tools away from dangerous people and we're not doing…
I find it interesting that the presence of a baptism was a blasphemy he considers tantamount to asking a Muslim to "spit on the face of Allah," as opposed to asking a Muslim to, y'know, recite the shehada.
A little late for Easter, but there you have it.
They didn't wear less into battle.
"Metal Gear Solid 3 had an arsenal of deadly weapons, and I only ever used a tranquilizer gun because I didn't feel comfortable playing a psychopath."
Which seems to be the point the author is making.
"...and just casting an angelic black actress in a popular role is enough to send white people into racist fits."
It's wordplay that was also convenient because Christ called himself a Fisher of Men.
Sounds familiar.
Kyle Katarn tie in with Episode VII plot, Plz.
That's great, but I wish it weren't framed as embracing "flaws."
"Diversity, in my opinion, will always net gains, in that it makes content creators more aware of when they are being exclusionary. I don't believe this is intentional, but people have a tendency to not look outside of their own demographic. When you are the one creating content, you will seek to add yourself, if only…
#cotd
I'm troubled by the assertion here that having more minority/female characters will somehow make video games appeal to a larger audience. Minorities and females already consume most media by identifying with protagonists that don't look like them - I'm skeptical that more people will play video games specifically…
In the room the women come and go
I once had this argument in a playwriting seminar. Someone tried to tell a Latina playwright that it didn't matter wh0 was cast as the (Latina) characters in her play because the story was universal, and that she might consider removing things - bits of language, terms of endearment, cultural references - that made…
The bigger problem is when people make arguments that those Asian characters - despite all evidence to the contrary - are white people.