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Yeah, but at least we have the favor of their CEO:

No, you're right — it's not trolling. It is, however, disruptive off-topic posting: flaming, if you will.

The one great thing about this new commenting system is.... well, unrelated to the commenting system, actually. I like how the editors are significantly more involved in the comments section than they used to be. It add so much more personality to the site.

Legend of Korra absolutely felt rushed. Comprised of such an immense amount of content, context, and atmosphere, I can't much fault its creators for doing their best to accommodate such a constraining, short twelve-episode season, however. As the dust settles following the conclusion of the first season, I feel a

As others have mentioned, the small blue ones are Tachikoma, but there are larger ones called Fuchikoma, which is probably what you're thinking of.

Eh, it only shoots 21fps at 4K. I'd only pick it for low-motion, high visibility scenarios.

Because being a professional somehow means you know absolutely anything and everything related to a piece of software? Or that you can fix any and all technical issues, bugs, incompatibilities, and limitations associated with that software? Even if you could, it would still be a waste of your valuable "professional"

I don't think you'll find many people, even amongst ardent Public Option/Socialized Healthcare/NHS-like system advocates, that won't agree that most private healthcare will be better and of a higher quality than that found in public systems. The issue here is simply that even such a low-quality public option still

While the commenting system won't impact my use of Kotaku for news and info purposes, it definitely discourages me from commenting quite as often.

Actually, I'm inclined to think that he likes the new commenting system since it apparently forgoes banning people in favor of their comments just becoming obscured...

You mention ICO; do you consider that game art?

I'm curious about some of these points, even if they're traditionally-minded ones.

After reading the article, it seems like you might need to have it injected continuously during that time period. The article mentions risks of administering the microparticles for more than that time "because they are carried in fluid that would overload the blood if used for longer periods."

Eyebrows? What about... eyebrows?

Is it physically or financial feasible for them to carry 1,000 color pallet combos across the battlefield? No.

It's more than that; there's also some serious anti-aliasing going on to make all the edges of objects smooth and remove all those jaggies visible in the normal screenshots.

It has a very Zelda-like gameplay flow, complete with an open world, dungeons, boss fights, and a bunch of special skills (equivalent to items/tools in a Zelda game) you learn over the course of the game.

I agree, but that sort of opinionated angle comes with the territory. Kotaku, like all of the Gawker blogs, has an extremely personal, opinionated tint to its writing; it's intentional. It's a part of the site I generally like, as it adds some flavor to the content, but I could see why some would have a problem with