children-of-revolution
children.of.revolution
children-of-revolution
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“You’re right. We should have done what every other country does when it conquers a people. Force assimilation or simply kill them all. Outside of Australia no other country has done nearly as much as we have for accommodating the native inhabitants

I think this counts more as a “customer service horror story” but anyway...

Working in a coffe shop, in a hospital. Hundreds of people everyday, not a very pleasant job. (Also, completely unrelated, but my boss was screwing me over my hours and taxes. I’m so glad I left that fucking shithole). Was cleaning the tables.

I think I still have a memory card with a save for Lucifer’s Call in which the gallant hero Stupid Asshole must find his adored teacher Ms. Retarded Bitch.

Yes, me and my best friend are really, reaaaaally mature /sarcasm

You had to refresh to get the trailer. Also, it took it like five minutes to work... this kind of things usually happen with countdowns and timed websites.

XDDDD. Oh my dog. You, miss, are amazing, and your husband is a lucky man.

Three words: Fuckin’ labor unions. Tell me again how they are totally useless.

“It is not a lake. It is an ocean”.

To this date, I am still thrilled by these words. What do they mean? In an industry that fails so repeatedly at doing worthy endings, those enigmatic words still haunt me. Sadly, it seems I will never know what they meant. Perhaps it is for the best.

Sigh... yeah, unfortunately it seems that Depression Quest will be forever tainted by its... let’s be polite and define them as ”detractors”. It is a pity... personally I haven’t played it, but the concept seems interesting (though I’d prefer something not done with Twine, save one or two examples I’ve found most game

Well, perhaps it was because at least Dear Esther and The Stanley Parable had pretty graphics instead of being a text-based game. I don’t know.

Of course, there is also the... ahem... unfortuante implications. :P

I’m really, really fond of Sunrider: Mask of Arcadius. It is a hybrid of visual novel and turn based hex wargame, set in your typical Gundam-esque space opera universe with giant robots and starships. It has every single cliché in the list: the spunky, dashing do-gooder, the cold and aloof XO who is also a childhood

Mr. Mochi is a goddamn classic.

Or, y'know, you could actually phrase your question right. If you were asking about animators in other developed countries, I don't have enough information to answer. But if you were asking in general, just youth recently out from school in the developed world, I repeat for the third time: most of them. I don't know

My answer still maintains.

"In which first-world country do you see young people make $1,000 per month?

Wholeheartedly agree. The West, and even more so the US, has a puritanical obsession with sex which I find frankly disturbing.

I liked the movie, but mostly, I'm fascinated by how it mimics the formal content of the comic and at the same time it manages to transmit the exact opposite message. A faithful adaptation in letter yet not in spirit. Usually, people tend to watch Alan Moore's reactions to his works' adaptations as ramblings of an old

It's funny. I've been interested in Elite: Dangerous for a while, but this is the piece that actually sold me the game. The idea of travelling through space in your own ship with ZZ Top in the background is dreamy.

No, it doesn't :P

First game I bought on release day in years.

Surprising! I read the comments, and it seems that there are still a lot of people who actually care about what Blizzard is into these days!

I'm definitely out of the loop.