chipnoir
ChipNoir
chipnoir

I’m just waiting for Orlando Studios to do virtual quidditch.

I really doubt something like this is going to be commercially affordable. What I do see is this quickly slamming into the arcade industry, which has resurged lately. Paying by the hour with a database to save your card via an ID card, this could be a MASSIVE boom in Japan, and maybe even in the U.S.

how terrible is it that I didn’t even notice her on the floor till they directly focused the camera on her?

I always found IX’s damage cap laughable. You hit it so early that it kind of makes all the later Dynes, Black magic, and Summons utterly pointless. Why waste the time with Ark when you could get the same damage just doing physical attacks or quick black magic?

Meh. This article feels click-baity and oversentivie. Can we please remember that even though it’s open to adults, it’s still a series aimed at children? Yeah, while I don’t condone stupidity within children literature, you can only go so dark, and so accurate before you’re going to lose your target audience.

It gets even stranger when you realize the timeline of the books and their releases aren’t the same either. The end of the series was in 1997, the same year it was actually first published in England and in a bit more than a year, we’ll have reached the date where the Deathly Hallows epilogue takes place.

Burning wasn’t the favored form of execution in Salem. Hanging and ducking were, which is a little harder to deal with I think. Also, the history books Harry was reading probably only dealt with Brittain’s history of magic. All of the magical communities seem to be really isolated, which is why the World Cup was such

Anyone else getting massive 90s vibe off of the animation style?

Comedy is 99% timing, so almost any joke can come off flat when it’s out of context in a trailer. The slime joke, for example, is probably a one-off line that isn’t even in the actual movie, but was shot for the trailer.

I think the cultural aversion to ‘casual’ refers to the newly discovered demographic who enjoy five minutes of Candy Crush, and think nothing of occasionally buying extra lives, because they’ve never spent money on anything else gaming, and don’t invest that much into a console/pc gaming experience. For a lot of us,

I’ve had a very strange relationship with the Star Trek universe over the at 20 or so years I’ve been aware of it. I started as a child of the 90s, briefly glancing at incidental reruns of the ToS, and somehow always coming across a dry, self-reverential moment that completely bored me. My first impression destroyed,

You sound remarkably Luddite’esq.

You get what you pay for. Computers are not exactly standadized either. You can have two of the exact same model and brand, and still find variabilities.

Then don’t buy the automated car, and let the rest of us get on with our lives. Last I checked, there are no raging rivers between me and my grocery store.

...It would take no more time probably than it took for you to google-map the place you were going to. And don’t lie: You’ve used googlemaps and GPS at least once.

So you’re saying you’re capable of a simple routine that can’t be coded?

Looking over all of the comments and I find them laughably...human.

First Elm Street, now this. She’s a lovely actress, but she has the absolute worst luck in roles. She needs to fire her agent before her career implodes.

If they can get this thing to work in tablet sizes, I can say goodbye to books forever. I still miss buttons though.

Yeah, I’ve played it. I find its kinda stiff and limited though.