He said something in the movie about how he wants his real arm back and then in the final scene he’s got his golden arm and there’s a fully red C3PO nearby. seems like useless clutter to me
He said something in the movie about how he wants his real arm back and then in the final scene he’s got his golden arm and there’s a fully red C3PO nearby. seems like useless clutter to me
I read in another article that this will be addressed in a comic book that is being released in feb
If you’ve seen Episode 4, you’ll know what is going to happen in the movie.
I’ve also seen it, it premiered here in Norway yesterday. There are a few moments where you see what’s going to happen before it happens, but that’s a fact about every movie, really. It would be absolutely impossible to do it with star wars, a series that fans have been making and thinking of a continuation for for…
I enjoyed it, but I felt there were a few too many knowing winks and call backs to the original trilogy for my liking
In that case, I recommend Christie Brinkley.
Coincidentally, a nice cold glass of ice water is probably a much better refreshment than either Monster or Red Bull.
DOOM REALLY LIKED THAT RUG IT REALLY TIED THE NEGAZONE TOGETHER
I’m pretty new to D&D, I’ve only played a little bit of 3rd and 4th editions and some of Baldur’s Gate. Planescape: Torment is my jam, though. I was never able to really get a handle on the realms, not even with the help of a wiki, of which there are many. This book really got through to me, though, and it’s…
That and Dark Sun...but I might be the only one who wants Dark Sun.
You know you fucked up when Philadelphia has the moral high ground
Classes are varied; there are far too many classes to actually be represented in a single game. They come in flavors that simply don’t exist in most FPS as well, including a purely melee lumbering tank, a pure healer, a jet-powered rocket jumper, and include a lot of the neatest mechanics of other recent FPSs, such as…
“Hello, this is the FBI and you owe us $500.”
One of the analogies I’ve used is Numenera is traditional exploration fantasy draped in weird tech rather than magic and The Strange is (the tv series) Fringe meets Planescape. Both are Science/Fantasy games but each approaches the blend of genres very differently.
Also, Nextwave is in your room touching your stuff.
Sing it with me now!
While researching my article on Monica Rambeau’s unfortunate history, I naturally re-read one of her standout…
Same system, different settings. Numenera is far far future science-fantasy, while The Strange is more genre-hopping sci-fi. The setting changes of course bring some mechanical differences as well, but that’s the long and short of it.
Please tell me there’s a “Bearded & Unemployed” series I’m unaware of somewhere in the canon that I can apply my well groomed visage to.