Yeah, but it’s not “live” as shown by Grimes not even being able to continue because there’s no actual live people actually playing instruments happening. That what live means.
Yeah, but it’s not “live” as shown by Grimes not even being able to continue because there’s no actual live people actually playing instruments happening. That what live means.
Imagine wanting to hear Grimes. That’s your own fault really. You deserve what you get.
Oh, so you’re stupid, and can’t read a totally different situation that you just googled. But good on you for a strawman.
Those movies were 20 years ago.
You have obviously never been on a set and clearly have no idea what a director does. Since you clearly don’t know, they give full control of any prop, from guns to whatever, to the crews that should know what they’re doing, and mostly sit down and watch their work and maybe give tips to the cinematographer on angles…
I wasn’t around during that, but I think the addition of live rounds is probably the key difference. A squib, improperly checked or not, is still a reasonable expectation on a movie set. A real bullet is not.
Brandon Lee’s incident was a bizarre and never before seen confluence of circumstances that changed basic protocol and everyone involved wasn’t just contrite, but it sent them into a spiral of depression that some barely recovered from. And there was a court case, but it was civil, so behind the scenes, and a private s…
I never played Fallout Shelter, the vault management sim, but I guess concentrating so much story here is something for those fans?
The show is canon, according to Bethesda, and, as a huge fan of the games, I can say the show works fine within the “canon” of the games (which has always shifted a bit due to unreliable narrators and the needs of the current game’s story). The show changes the location of one pretty famous large settlement in the…
The show is canon though, according to Bethesda, and really, aside from the location of one place (that was likely just for the sake of it being a place the characters of the show would be closer to) it pretty much follows the timeline of the games. I consider myself a FO geek and I don’t get what the “purists” are up…
Uhhhh, I’ll just say... avoiding spoilers as best I can here... definetely keep watching the show.
It’s actually Filly, because the town was built on landfill. It’s an unnecessarily confusing name though, I agree. The show really could’ve come up with a name that wasn’t the nickname for a completely different major US city.
I think the portrayal of the BoS so far is pretty true to the games. While they are pretty powerful and have decent organization compared to other factions they are also notoriously fractured, getting their asses kicked due to overestimating their prowess, and prone to abandoning their people in the wasteland to fend…
I agree. I watched the first episode with a friend who has no familiarity with the games, and when we were talking about it after, he was a bit confused as to when the flashbacks were supposed to be taking place. He got the impression that it may have been the real world 1950s. To be fair, the flashbacks do show some…
In the game world some factions of the Brotherhood of Steel do have women knights but it varies. Since long distance travel isn’t especially easy the wasteland, and it’s easy to be isolated, the different factions are shown to vary from extremely, almost religiously, zealous, (like the BoS of the show which seems to…
Yup. Kotaku was already hanging by a thread. Now it’s dead.
What are you talking about? It was the graphics and production department, hired for the film, that made these.
That’s not actually the case. The fine print of film contracts usually has some clauses that nullify or allow amendment of the contract in the case of the company going out business, being bought out, merged, etc.
Mazin has said he expects to make at least two more seasons, so I expect they won’t kill Joel off until mid/late of the upcoming season and instead use earlier episodes to fill in some of Abby’s backstory so the audience has some sympathy for her... before Ellie proceeds to kill everyone she cares about.
Yup. Everyone’s avatars are gone.