dkesserich
DKesserich
dkesserich

It’s not a hardware issue, it’s a software issue. The PSVR was pretty much a big Playstation Move hack. Everything ran through the Playstation Move APIs.

IIRC the context of that quote was talking about streaming residuals. Once upon a time before the days of streaming, even non-super star actors who were part of the main cast of a hit show could count on residuals to cover expenses between seasons, so they didn’t have to worry about needing to line up another job

Who the fuck is still watching this asshole?

Nintendo doesn’t employ scrubbers to constantly search for copyright infringement. We’ve seen time and time and time again that it’s not until something Nintendo related gets coverage on mainstream video game news sites that Nintendo takes action (often in less than 24 hours). It’s happened with every single fan

They haven’t gone after Ryujinx because it has never penetrated the mainstream. I guarantee that if Kotaku/Eurogamer/Polygon/whomever ran a ‘Good news everyone! Switch emulation isn’t dead, you can use Ryujinx!’ story tomorrow, it’d be at most a week after that for RyuJinx to get a C&D and a DMCA takedown on their

So is Kotaku going to acknowledge their role in this, and shift their editorial stance regarding running stories about emulation, in particular emulating pirated games? I recall ‘Tears of the Kingdom runs great on Yuzu even before it’s been released on Switch’ being front page news here.

Lawmower Man the movie is kind of a stealth sequel to Firestarter, but I guess they didn’t have the rights to Firestarter, so they dug around to figure out what King story they DID have the rights to, and found Lawnmower Man.

Well, they were clearly not just in development but in production well before United Artists/MGM’s claim on the copyright would have expired and allowed for Hill’s claim for reassignment to be valid.

Hang on, aren’t these sorts of rights reversions usually contingent on whether something is in development using the rights, not necessarily completed? Seems weird that Road House, of all things, would be an exception to that general rule.

The rumour was that the reason they decided to shop CvA around was because a lot of high profile creatives cancelled their meetings with WB after the initial shelving announcement. It would now appear that ‘shopping it around’ was just to get those people back in and now that they’ve presumably signed some contracts,

I think it’s kind of weird how in Season 1 Cortana’s hologram was a 100% CG character that was also clearly designed to look kinda sorta like Natascha McElhone, and this season it’s just live action Christina Bennington with some VFX on top, and everybody is just pretending that nothing’s changed.

Somebody HAS to be able to do something about this bullshit.

Definitely didn’t happen on screen. End of Season 1 she found out about her family connection to some sort of Forerunner artifact on Madrigal (implied to be some sort of teleportation bridge thing to a Halo). But then in the debrief in the first episode of this season they say that the Covenant glassed Madrigal just

That cadence is apparently the only thing he can do anymore, because he used it in his cameo at the end of season 2 of Picard.

it seemed inclined to do its own thing rather than be the midpoint of a trilogy.

There is absolutely no way that this is going to be ‘affordable,’ and next to no chance that it will ever be made available to consumers. It’s got way too many moving parts and needs some hefty dedicated computational power to work.

Danish wasn’t the only body down there. I suspect that was the femur of Saint Linda.

My first thought was ‘hope Witt’s got his dashcam on.’ Not sure how Gator could play off putting a bullet through a State Trooper’s windshield, regardless of the propriety of Witt being there in the first place.

I was under the impression that this started as a licensed Star Wars story that Disney passed on.

The FTC that rubber-stamped the Fox acquisition was a very different beast than the current FTC, which has been much more adversarial to mega-mergers like this. (See: Microsoft buying Activision, which the FTC fought tooth and nail. And even more recently Adobe’s attempted acquisition of Figma).