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XZero
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I have way too many to list. A few notable standouts:

Xenoblade was a game for which I was super excited, mostly due to the hype surrounding its release on the Wii. The Operation Rainfall games were on my radar to encourage Nintendo to actually support stuff like that. Like others have mentioned, I love the Xenoblade world, story, and soundtrack, but I just couldn't

In August of 1999, an innocent VHS showed up with Jet Force Gemini and Donkey Kong 64 featured. This was before the age of YouTube and it served as my only real introduction to Jet Force Gemini aside from the Nintendo Power article. It looked so cool and I was stoked to play it.

I'll be honest with you, the only covenants I grinded were the Covenant of the Sun and the Bellkeeper Covenant. The other one you have to max is the one where you fight Darklurker at the end. I pyro'd him to dead.

As you can likely imagine, I felt sick to my stomach when the platinum trophy didn't pop and I realized what I did. I tried to see if I could back up my save before it overwrote it but of course that didn't work. I wanted to cry. Demon's Souls is on my to-do list. I tried it but never got into it. I think now that I

Hey thanks! I agree with you that II was more fun that the original Dark Souls. Quick storytime!

Last weekend, I finally scored the platinum trophy in Dark Souls II, which, unlike its predecessor, was more of a project than a challenge. II was fun, but it was an easier platinum. It took 75 hours to get, 40-50 for my actual playthrough and probably 20-25 of sitting and waiting to be summoned and then hoping that

I'm hoping to wrap up my Platinum Trophy run of Dark Souls II this weekend. Started it about a month ago and completed my first playthrough without much difficulty. I don't like playing Dark Souls games online though; I know PVP and help is a core component of the game, but I loved that it was fully optional in the

1L students who are purportedly at the top of their class working full-time at their professor's law firm is completely unrealistic. It cannot happen. Period.

I pointed out in a couple of comments on the recent How to Get Away with Murder episode reviews that a lot of television shows are painfully inaccurate legally. I want to praise Better Call Saul on that point. Chuck cites real, actual law, and gets it right. He rattles off real case names for their correct points of

All valid points (some of which I've similarly made myself). When I watched the very first episode, I pointed out the same thing—it is impossible to be a full-time law student and do what the students here are depicted as doing. Can't happen; maybe third year of law school, but first years don't do this.

The Annalise storyline in this episode was fantastic. It explained a lot about her character that had heretofore been speculation, and Cicely Tyson was perfect as Ophelia Harkness.

On the accuracy spectrum, it's on the low end. The Good Wife has interesting drama, but its portrayal of the legal system is either extraordinarily condensed, conveniently blind to certain realities, or overly focused on creating judicial drama where it would rarely exist.

I'm a Pennsylvania attorney and while my wife and I enjoy the show, I probably drive her insane every time we watch it. "That's not how that works" and "Yeah… she'd lose her license for that" are two very common commentaries I have on every last episode. The whole plea bargain thing made no sense and was completely