A bit of Kingdom Come: Deliverance and some Dark Souls 3.
A bit of Kingdom Come: Deliverance and some Dark Souls 3.
Both, though I suspect the program structure letting companies like Shake Shack get loans is a far smaller part of the problem. the program probably needs a trillion dollars which is over twice as big as it was initially and still a few hundred billion more than what this bill allocated to it.
“It’s your state that is living on the money that we generate,” Cuomo said. “Your state is getting bailed out. Not my state.”
You can praise other cuts of meat without pretending that there aren’t perfectly good reasons that chicken breast flies off the shelf.
Did anyone even try to primary the guy?
It’s not shocking.
I don’t shop there, but I don’t know that shopping there makes you a bad person.
Eh, losing the Bethesda games just reminded me of how much better Dark Souls
The only way that GeForceNow potentially needs to be able to be “pushed forward” is if it can somehow negotiate a deal to get these publishers back. I was an early “Founder” (jumped over early because my GPU is slagged and I don’t feel like spending money to upgrade it right now). For $5 a month, the value proposal…
Core gamer here who’s gaming PC has a busted GPU and about the only thing I miss right now are mods on a few Bethesda titles. $5 as month until July when I get my bonus and can get my setup sorted back out again is totally fine.
Yeah, as much as it pains me to say so (because small business owners’ livelihoods are on the line), it feels like the shift to digital is long overdue.
Why does anyone listen to this chud?
I’m not sure about the actual constitutional argument here. As to the economic argument ... shrug?
Over a long enough timeframe, maybe, but for the immediately forseeable future, as ridiculous as Trump is, the likely policy outcome here isn’t going to be fields of rotting fruits and vegetables.
In the past few months, writers have identified mass disillusionment with celebrity as part of the overall ennui of this cultural moment.
I had to work basically full time right through college. I lived with my parents and went to a commuter school to keep the debt load under control and I took advantage of every free thing I could on campus. And yet still, despite all that, once I was on my own and had disposable income in my early to mid 20s, I was…