comradepig--disqus
ComradePig
comradepig--disqus

SWTOR also seemed obsessed with the concept of being an MMORPG for people who didn't want to interact with other players, a profoundly silly idea that I still don't understand the logic of in the slightest.

I would drop so much money to be able to get my hands on a current-gen equivalent of X-Wing Alliance and its custom battle creator.

I find the lack of Luuke Skywalker disturbing.

Destroying planets is for chumps, let's crush suns, then universes!

Sure Darth Vader may have been a despot, but his iron fist was all that
was keeping the Empire's delicate ethnic and religious balance in check.

I've started watching the quite enjoyable Enlisted. (Hey everyone! It's me, the guy who starts watching all your favorite shows once they've already been cancelled!)

You might be a young physician, but are you a 25 year old powerlifter?

Kangaroos are really neat; they are full of turtle kangaroo meat.

"Look, I'm not even hoverhanding!"

It's the Japanese watermelon of the animal kingdom.

I've seen it all in the documentary, Escape from LA.

In an ideal world, sending a firm 'no longer interested' type message would definitely be the better, no ambiguity option for everyone involved.

You know what I love about elf girls man, I get older and wither into dust…and they eternally stay the same age.

They do move in herds.

They definitely exist, but usually show up en mass late enough into the conversation that they can be ignored.

Yeah, Lucy has the potential to be fun but every time the ten percent thing pops up it makes me feel like I've wandered into the film version of a chain email.

Yeah, the movie does a nice job of capturing a world prior to the arrival of the sort of omnipresent public lighting we're familiar with today, and although the film is set in the 1920s I appreciated that the working class areas of the film evoke an even earlier era, which rang true to me from photographs of the

We get it Hitler, you'd prefer a more final solution.

This weekend I watched James Gray's beautiful period drama The Immigrant, a superbly crafted picture that expertly evokes only the mood and look of its setting, but on a more substantive level, exhibits an authentic understanding of the mentality and inner lives of figures in the past. Aesthetically this is one hell a