cesil99
cesil99
cesil99

Interesting... I’ve mostly been DPS, but I often love going Tank on occasions (after being a squishy mage, it feels great going into the middle of the brawl, controlling the battle and being able to take a beating).

Yes, you’re totally correct and I agree. I just find it interesting that a “simple” question for the general population is not that simple at all when it’s considered on its scientific terms.

These scientists cackle me up. They had to answer such a simple question in the most out of the box way possible:

So basically the game is Braid version 0.001?

Have you played any of the old republic games? Those games make it clear that there are thousands of years of history to play with. Where do the sith and the Jedi come from? How did the republic started? Why are there so few sith now? All those questions have answers.

You could also argue that Japan loves detectives!

There were many things they could have done without essentially ruining what was supposed to be the primary healer for the game. The worst thing is that when they originally released Valkyrie it gave you 2 faster Rez and then they rolled that back too. I think Blizzard has focused too much on the pros and are losing

That was... umm... slightly better than I was expecting? I mean, I’m no Sonic fan, but if you look past his character design, the movie seems kind-of fun? Don’t know... maybe I’m just still sleepy.

If you think that 100 hours of Persona is enough, then this is not for you and that’s fine. I personally would spend 100 more hours with Persona and be very happy with it. “Overstaying its welcome” is not a concern for me and thousands of other Persona fans.

LOL ... I don’t think that it’s a “hot take”. You’ll find plenty of people agreeing with you. (Not me. I loved FF-X for it’s story and combat, although the limited equipment / accessories system was a shame. FF-X2's combat was fun and really fast. Sad that the story sucked, so I never completed it... I have it on the

I think that the article’s title says it all: “An easy mode has never ruined a game”. Can you tell me how your experience of a game like Sekiro would be changed if additionally to the current normal mode it included an easy mode? We are not talking about changing the current normal, but adding an easy mode.

I wouldn’t call it nonsensical, it’s just the most straightforward business answer you could get and one you rarely see given out like this. It’s basically: “Our only real policy is making money and preventing not making money. If a game on Steam puts us at risk of not making money, then we’ll pull it out.”

Yes, I read a bit more about it and figured that was the case. The thing is that it was okay as long as it wasn’t Netflix doing it. If he wants to play the “they’re only doing the bare minimum” card, then it will apply to everyone and that may have unintended circumstances.

I don’t think the theater experience will die. It’s not the same watching a movie at the theater than watching at home. And movies with solid theater releases just make too much money. People are willing to pay the premium price for the experience and the premier even if the movie will be on Netflix 2 or 3 months

Is this actually a good hoax? I mean, if it caused people to be more concerned about what their children are viewing online, it could actually have done some good.

Seriously, when someone decides to do an AMA in 8chan... “do you even Internet?”

Nice! From The Promised Neverland. The intro one is really good too.

Why the insults? Can’t you have a decent conversation like an adult? Would you be talking to me that way if we were discussing the issue face to face?

Scams are basically ways of taking advantage of “idiots” as you put it and they’re still a crime.

Thing is... if they would have told Cole in the beginning that the Heirloom set cost was $500, he may not have bought it. The thing with gambling is that you don’t know what you’re going to get. So probably he thought that he would spend $100 or a bit more. But after spending $300, I imagine that on his mind he was