To me, it shows that people like to download games that are cheap (impulse buy) and have a small memory footprint. For full-prices games, I prefer to buy with an Amazon discount, and big games I’d rather not have eating up my memory card.
To me, it shows that people like to download games that are cheap (impulse buy) and have a small memory footprint. For full-prices games, I prefer to buy with an Amazon discount, and big games I’d rather not have eating up my memory card.
To try and anticipate your response:
Personally, I think it’s a bad faith argument to blame non-consensual or manipulative sexual advances on a sexually liberated culture. You can have one without the other. Your argument also implies that before the advent of culturally normalized casual sex, women were being treated respectfully and on equal footing.…
Where in the article does it say or imply that the entire male population thinks this way?
I think the editing and delivery on this one are great, and I echo the previous comment that you have a spot on radio voice. The one thing that’s rubbed me wrong on some of your other videos is frequent use of slow-down on the audio track, but you don’t do that here, and I think it’s all the better for it
This reminds me a little of picking up Morrowind while in middle school, though I imagine that game’s failings weren’t quite as egregious for the time. I got hooked by the game while also being amazed by how glaring it’s flaws were.
Doom is one of the few video games I’ve played in my life to give me motion sickness, just playing it the normal mass-market way. I can’t imagine how debilitating the VR version would be.
Disagree. The voice acting is awful. Excruciating to listen to.
Wow! This (preferring rando rumor mills over authoritative, rigorous news outlets) is exactly how the public interacts with the standard news/politics media as well!
Naw bruh, I’ve been playing video games since the early 90s and I care about all these things. I agree that most people don’t think about them; but I come to Kotaku for interesting insights on a hobby that’s meaningful to me, not for surface-level opinions shared by the majority.
I always enjoy your curt dismissals of hyperventilating, pearl-clutching commenters who don’t get that reviews of video games are opinions, and opinions are subjective, and an interesting opinion is one that brings insight to the table, not one that reinforces the opinions of the commenter.
I’ll also throw in Bravely Default. Don’t watch anime but play lots of Japanese games and, at times... ick
Oh, I dunno. Those seem like they could be two very different experiences, depending on your preferences.
I’m a big fan of the mutually condescending arguments on Kotaku that spring out of lapses in reading comp. Anyway, nice article!
This is actual common practice (from my experience circa 2006-2008). As is bringing small gifts of any kind whenever visiting someone as a guest.
1) That man does not owe you anything. You’re not entitled to a new video game or an explanation or anything else
Dear Cecilia. I see you have made a lighthearted statement on the internet. Please see below for my ten-page, point-by-point counterargument, sprinkled with ad hominems, which I have posted below and also mailed to your office in hard copy. Please advise as to when I should expect my apology.
I only ever listen to your videos. Sometimes I even put my phone on the other side of the room so I don’t accidentally catch sight of any of the images. Other times I connect it to my Dolby 5.1 setup and lay back on my couch and think, “Yes, this is exactly how this media was meant to be enjoyed.” But there’s no way…
Have taken the day off. Got the little thing plugged into my TV. Two and a half hours in. Jazzed.