clank-o-tron
clank-o-tron
clank-o-tron

I think you're misunderstanding the comments system here. When an unstarred commenter makes a post, it gets filtered down to the bottom where it waits for someone to promote or reply to it. Sometimes it even takes a bit of time for the comments of starred commenters to show up.

The proper saying is "it's in the last place you would look", e.g. the least likely place. However, it later became shortened to "it's in the last place you'd look". The commonly-used form drops off that essential apostrophe + d combo, rendering it an unintelligible shell of its former self.

RIP Mr. Trololo :(

God bless the pissed-off ghost of Colin Chapman that I assume is to thank for this quick change.

This is brilliant and I'm totally going to do it sometime. Thanks, Jason!

For what it's worth, this is being developed by a bunch of former Project Gotham guys. I'm not expecting anything NEAR sim levels of feel.

(orson_wells_clapping.gif)

"You can leave it open, and park it wherever, and not worry. And there is great value in having an enthusiast car experience like that"

I'd like to propose a #qotd here - what are people's opinions of replica kit cars? On the one hand, recreating a rare but beautiful car allows more people to witness the brilliant design in person, but on the other hand, it's a bit poseur. And what about the Caterham, which is sort of a replica but has gained respect

Hey, I've been on number 2! I was amazed at how long it was - I think it was like 20 or 30 minutes by train.

This just means that the chunky Elise (which I will childishly refer to as a "Bloatus") will be a quirky collector's item once they return to making spartan cars that I love but can't afford.

I've never been a fan of the Z... but this looks amazing.

What makes it different is that, using the "egg and spoon" analogy, the size of your spoon is directly related to the tempo of the music. When the music speeds up your spoon effectively gets larger and you can safely make more bold moves, the end result being that the game's temp controls the tempo of the action. That

"Yes, the Internet has given us all the superior position of judging people with a thumbs up or thumbs down, every day, ancient Rome style, based on clips, sound bytes and hearsay. It's getting old."

My first instinct is to call Wes immature for stooping down to their level, and that's a reasonable instinct based on impartial information. However, when I think back to the times when someone tried to change lanes on top of me without even signaling, or made an illegal left in front of me or any number of other

I do miss these slice-of-life stories that Jalopnik used to run all the time in the olden days.

I would be honored to have this thing fly past me on the track.

$75 in legal fees? I guess that's how long it takes a lawyer to pop into a courtroom for a quarter-second and go "pssssh" dismissively.