It's bigger than the launch PS3. It looks pretty huge when placed against other things. If you look near the end of the video, you can see that the system is as wide as the guy's chest.
It's bigger than the launch PS3. It looks pretty huge when placed against other things. If you look near the end of the video, you can see that the system is as wide as the guy's chest.
If they do it, Star Wars is going to be Luke, Vader, and Han Solo, and Marvel would probably be Iron Man, Captain America, and Loki (Maybe a second set with Thor, Hulk, and Spider-Man). Most every set is Hero, Side kick, Villain, with the Incredibles being the exception.
There are little Wreck-it-Ralph style version of characters in the game, and you can find Kermit, Mrs. Piggy, and Animal in Hall of Heroes.
Can't believe no one mentioned that this was a level in Call of Duty: Black Ops. Too blatant, I guess?
Some of those pictures don't look too new, especially when compared to the "new art direction" at the bottom, but that box art looks very legit.
I got the post chapter 3 glitch too. There's a fix for it involving changing the timestamp of the game if you're so inclined. But yea, pretty buggy.
Shame. I met a lot of the CD team at E3 and they were really cool people. Sad to hear some of them were let go.
They call it a SKU conversion.
As to the condition of the game, it's a common practice at GameStops called a SKU Conversion. They take old copies of the game that are New at the warehouse and "convert" them to used games and take off the wrapping. They do this because the computers are set up to only restock new games when one is sold, but used…
Generation gaps. Most the kids I knew in the 80s grew up watching Disney movies from well before they were born, but my friends who had kids in the 00's mostly only showed them 90s stuff and later. I think it's a combination of showing your kids what you watched growing up and there being way, way more movies out…
You'd think, with Sugar Rush Mountain and Tangled Tower already being Toybox Themes, they could easily make them into playsets. They just need to add the villain character in and they're set.
THIS IS NOT A BAD THING.
Yes, but you're probably at least in your twenties. Ask someone in their teens and Disney would be Finding Nemo, Cars, Monsters Inc, and Pirates. Ask someone under 10 and it would be Tangled, Up, Wall-E, and Wreck-it-Ralph. It's a matter of what you grew up with, and if your parents aren't showing you older Disney…
All forms of cards sold in the US are considered currency conversion and therefore untaxable. I don't how it is outside of the US.
Why are they trying to sell you those? Reserves, Warranties, and Magazine Subscriptions I can understand because they'll lost work hours (and basically be let go) if they don't get, but strat guides? It's not even a store focus outside the first day of sale for a game.
Hmm. Let's think of some of the other types of customers I saw on a regular basis in my decade there.
The kid not old enough to know what games are but thinks the shelves would be really fun to climb.
There will never be tax on the card purchases, and he isn't say that. What he is saying is that there is tax on the game purchases, and the cards aren't enough to cover it. Get 1600 points, which is $20, and it isn't enough for a $20 game because it becomes $21.40.
I hate how they always call multiplayer "MP". I know it's a valid abbreviation, but it just sounds so douchy.
Not on topic but I've been playing Divinity: Dragon commander and having a great time with it. Gives off really serious Dragon Age vibes, except with Jetpack Dragons and Starcraft II style gameplay.
I concur.