I guess my FPS skills just aren't l33t enough for the modern gamer.
I guess my FPS skills just aren't l33t enough for the modern gamer.
omg bro you are SO xXh4RdC0r3Xx
I used to think like you when I was in college. Now that I have a job and adult responsibilities, I have a lot less time to play games and almost never reach the pro level. Now I value each and every olive branch developers extend to the more casual audience. I'm not asking for the same experience as hardcore…
There should always be a practice option for players that haven't been playing competitively online for a decade (like you). What if this is their first CoD? Are they just supposed to deal with the steep learning curve and enjoy getting pounded into the dust round after round? PvP will always be a very different…
Us old school folks used to contact our source of network of friends and co-workers to get various rumors and second-hand reports of how future employees would react to situations. Not so anymore! Welcome to the Twitter generation.
He really does sound like a piece of shit person going through his history. Maybe he's a swell guy irl but as far as internet interactions go, he's a grade A cunt.
He dropped a tactical nuke on his bridge and now he's trying to throw over a 2x4 to help his team so they still get paid and the game released while washing his hands of it all hoping it absolves everything?
Stango is my coworker and friend and I'm teasing him.
“Everything that is possible on the PC is possible on the PS4; but there are some things that are possible on the PS4 that are not possible on the PC,” Sang Youn Lee told me. He also assured me that the game looks as good on the PS4 as it does on high-end PCs.
8GB of unified memory (and the OS to leverage it), for one, can make a pretty big difference in what is possible in terms of graphics. We've had an influx of newer games this last year with VGA memory requirements that exceed the very best that consumer PC GPUs currently offer (6GB in at least one case). To be fair,…
It's almost like the guy making the game might know what he's talking about?
That's my theory, for what it's worth!
"worth over $15k"
Not that anyone actually pays that kind of money for them. There are much more important and worthwhile things to spend $15k on.
No he didn't. He opened something that is speculated to be worth $33,000 based on rarity. Should he actually search for a real buyer, he'd either have to settle for much less or never, ever sell the card.
No one. They claim it's an investment, but there are no buyers. The value of these cards is based purely on price speculation. If you had an emergency and you had $300,000 of medical bills and $300,000 worth of magic cards, guess what? You're probably never going to find a buyer, and your 'investment' is…
If you could depreciate the value of a car in the parking lot of a dealership by thousands of dollars with a single fingerprint, they damn well would have them behind glass until you'd signed the lease.
I don't have tons of money. But I don't think this thing is worth tons of money, either. It's a card, for a game, and you can't even USE IT IN SAID GAME.
I absolutely disagree. I think the people who put $30,000 of value into a card (and one that isn't even legal in play for that matter!) have issues. I think, especially, that people who collect things like this for the sake of collecting or because they think it's some sort of 'investment' have issues.
You could buy a console and tv to leave around your friends house for about half the price. Its a novel idea, like mounting a flame thrower on to a machine gun with duct tape but less practical.