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I wouldn’t say it’s not worth it, but the fact that anyone can get the gun does take away some of the allure.

WTF is with all the white, DICE?!?!?! You’re wrecking my screen and my eyes. Arghhh!

Depends. How long does the vibrate mode last?

I don’t see the problem. Like with all gambling games, you win some bets and you lose some. ;)

As far as I can see, aside from the mercy rule, there has been no changes made to matchmaking in Year 2. It’s still as random as it ever was.

Star Wars is not a series of movies. It’s not a collection of interconnected stories.”

Yeah, I agree about the pre-order bonuses. I don’t even pay attention to that crap anymore. I buy most of my games from one retailer now and if they don’t happen to have the best pre-order bonus, I don’t even care.

Yup. When I rage, I have to remind myself that crucible is meant to be fun and cannot be taken seriously. Ironically, the other day the game for once lagged in my favor. I could see enemies attempting to shoot me, but they were shooting where I was standing seconds ago. Got a good long streak going, though

I kinda see better what you’re saying, but I personally don’t buy it and don’t think pre-ordering is a bad concept. While I agree that there were some huge disappointments (Watch Dogs was one such disappointment for me), I don’t think developers go “oh, we have # thousand preorders already, let’s just stop trying and

We’re talking about two different things. The linked article and the original comment was about how the concept of pre-ordering itself is bad (the argument for which I don’t understand). You’re talking about making wise purchase decisions by waiting for reviews before buying something, which is easily understood.

Again, as I replied to someone else, developers making buggy/incomplete games has nothing to do with pre-ordering. If no one pre-ordered Arkham Knight and all those people bought it on day one instead, the game would still have been buggy. Pre-ordering has nothing to do with lazy or dumb developers.

What does that have to do with pre-ordering? If the same people didn’t pre-order and had bought it on day one, it would still have been “a pile of steaming horse manure.”

Sorry, but that still doesn’t make sense to me. Maybe I’m being dense. Example: even if nobody pre-ordered Fallout 4, they have a release date. It will be released on that date, whether it’s a “finished” product or not. I don’t see what pre-orders have to do with the game being a finished product or not. They have a

I don’t understand why pre-ordering is bad. I read the linked article. Still makes no sense to me. If I know I’m going to buy a game on day one anyways, what’s the disadvantage of pre-ordering, especially if it comes with pre-order bonuses? The thing I don’t like is giving retailers exclusive bonuses (e.g., Gamestop

“Lag and connectivity problems continue to be the primary things holding Destiny PvP back”

They lost me with AC3. Loved the time period, but disliked the game, the character, and the story. Despite AC4 being good, I no longer consider myself a fan of the series. I’ll play them when they become the inevitable free Game with Gold on Xbox.

The thing I don’t like, which some may argue is pure RNG, but I am sure Bungie intended — when you are in mid 290s, you get a TON of lower light gear from the cryptarch. It’s like Bungie telling you to go play the raid and level up instead of relying on engrams.

Depends on the difference in light levels. You get 80% of the difference, and Destiny rounds up. So if you have a 306 and infuse it with a 310. You will get a 310 (because difference of 4 x 80% = 3.2 so round up to 4).

This. OMG. 99% of people I see are 40 so that number is meaningless the way it is shown now.

Sweet! Thanks!

Sweet! Thanks!