Can’t tell if its Bobby’s burner account or a sweet summer child.
Can’t tell if its Bobby’s burner account or a sweet summer child.
So, who wants to take guesses on how terrible Diablo 4 will turn out?
My wife and I finished Streets of Rage II on Hardest, 3 lives, no continues. So we love brawlers. After 15 minutes on Castle Crashers with 2 other people, she leaned over to me and asked, “Do we have to keep playing this? It’s really boring.” I’d like to see them focus more on the feel of gameplay than the humor of…
She is spewing hate, that’s it, that is all she’s doing. Any redeeming qualities she might have are drowned out by the vile nature of her beliefs.
Well, she earned that award, that’s for sure. Rarely have I seen a bigger CUNT.
Oh, so it’s 2021
“New” 3DS and 2DS XL
My biggest issue with cardboard cases like these is that they regularly scratch discs. Plastic cases have less of an issue with that, and I’d rather buy recycled plastic cases instead.
The Child, for the most part, was portrayed by a very real, very expensive puppet, so no uncanny valley 3D nonsense there... also, it had hair and it was pretty noticeable. maybe you were watching it on an iWatch?
Microsoft owns Obsidian. Even on Gamepass you’re helping the devs since I’m sure MS tracks those statistic.
I’m keeping this short. Thank you for your thoughtful response.
I never said “savage” was never a slur. However, I am of the strong opinion it is no longer. You’re much more likely to hear it used to describe an action or feeling online these days, and probably not at all in everyday life.
I won’t claim to be Native…
1883 was almost 140 years ago. A lot has changed.
In my opinion, this article feels a bit damaging to general cultural progress if you’re trying to handcuff someones intent to something they didn’t intend. Historically, there is a million ways we all could be up in arms against every facet of everyday life if we want to deadlock ourselves to the negative and ignore…
Precisely. I think the writer here is reaching quite a bit to make a point that just doesn’t stand up very well. There is a real problem in fiction of having no disabled people at all - so many worlds were there simply aren’t any people that aren’t awesome and beautiful. Let’s talk about that, not this weird complaint…
No, don’t you see! If you fall into a specific minority you MUST be defined by being part of that group. It must be your identity. It is your responsibility to take on that role. If you deny said responsibility, you’re a problem.
This is a fiction trope that transcends the world of fantasy and is just a disabled trope: that, when given the option between disabled or abled, a person will always choose the former even if they’ve been disabled their whole life. Because most authors, screenwriters, or other creatives are able-bodied they are…
This article is ignoring the complicated psychology of the character in order to satisfy the thesis. The author even acknowledges that the show depicts the power and sexuality of Yennefer. Other characters are basically telling her that she’s fine the way she is but she doesn’t believe them or in herself.
Yennefer’s transformation is just one of several media performances wherein a disabled person is magically cured to promote the idea that normality equals physically abled.
The books are actually a tad ambiguous about just what’s the reason behind sorcerous sterility. Tissaia de Vries, Yennefer’s mentor, is an activist for deliberately sterilising all mages at young age to ensure that they’d be loyal to magic alone, which wouldn’t be such an issue if they tended to be sterile to begin…
He’s the anti-Leslie Jones.