brendandriscoll
Started as a Cleric and Ended up an Innkeeper
brendandriscoll

I don't mean to be 'that guy,' but those helmets have more Greek characteristics than Roman.

You get a gold star.

awww...

Put that in your vows.

I think the animation scared me more than the mother did.

Stupid commenting system wont add my pictures.

zomg

Dual cover? Oh those sneaky bastards.

Well now. How very mature. I actually live in the U.S. but I've been in the U.K. for a while studying abroad at St. Catherine's, and there aren't really many game stores near me so I have quite a limited selection of places to buy new games. I purchased the collectors edition online so the only other experience I've

Whoops, my mistake. I didn't watch the video. In a sense I'm used to watching subtitles and not understanding a single word of the dialogue because: A)Yakuza 1 takes bad English voice acting to a monumentally bad level, and B) Even if some of the subtitles might be a little inaccurate, I'm used to awkward English

For people that are obsessed with the Yakuza series as much as I am, there is a youtube channel with all the dialogue and menus translated for you.

Also, words cannot describe how much I loved Morrowind. haha

You have a good point but I think this might be leaning towards the argument of personal preference. When I played Fallout 3 I found it a little difficult to get completely immersed in to the story. While I enjoyed the game immensely, I remember playing a significantly larger amount of side missions when I played

That's a shame but I guess to each his own. I personally loved Oblivion for its open-ended world that was not intensely action oriented or very repetitive. I loved that heavy emphasis on exploration and massive story line. I probably would have agreed with you on nearly any other game but with Morrowind and Oblivion,

Or that one (to avoid spoilers) iconic spaghetti western film star? Or the scene reminiscent of one of Johnny Depp's previous films(I completely forgot the title at the moment) when he is impersonating a bowlegged man with a hunched back, or the fact that Mr. Lebowski essentially makes a return in this movie. The

Now it all comes together....

I thought that the sweat was a strain of smallpox. Also, another fun fact I just read a 15th century novel(and I mean it was personally written by one of the founders of St. Johns college at Cambridge) here at one of the libraries at Cambridge and the author goes in to heavy detail about the sweating aspect of it and

So we have already proven that this isn't the case(The tax claim). So why is this guy still clinging to this lie? Oh wait, Fox.

I weep for modern cinema.