I'd love to hear a Kayfabe reasoning behind drafting Alexa, Carmella and Nia Jax before Bayley and Asuka.
I'd love to hear a Kayfabe reasoning behind drafting Alexa, Carmella and Nia Jax before Bayley and Asuka.
I remember playing this and, when they revealed the MMORPG thing, pausing the game for about five minutes because I was laughing so hard.
My wife was laughing at me for how hard I marked out when Daniel Bryan's music hit, and I don't even care.
I've liked SP less every time I've seen it.
My wife and I were both a little weirded out by the Wyatt/New Day segment, given the racial history of America.
Counterpoint: thanks to the game, I now know that Abe Lincoln once said that his debate opponent had his head stuck up his own ass, albeit in slightly more flowery language than that.
We played "The Contender" this weekend, which is basically CAH: American Political Debate edition.
I went to a house show in Orlando on Sunday and they wrestled. So they still exist, at least.
That sounds hilarious.
I once had a dream in which my future children asked me to describe what society was like in the years before 9/11.
I'm worried it's going to make them worse.
If I've learned anything from this primary, it's that back in 03/04, all my talk about Howard Dean must have been insufferable to everyone around me.
A bunch of my friends keep talking about how excited they are to draft it.
I like the match a lot if I view it through a lens where I ignore how tired of Roman's booking I am.
KO's hatred of Cole is my favorite running story in WWE.
Look, we just have to accept the fact that 2 Styles clashes, one onto a chair, and a whole mess of chair shots simply isn't enough to keep a hero like Roman down.
When I went to the Royal Rumble, I went with 3 friends, two of whom hadn't watched wrestling in a while.
It's hilarious how accurate that is.
My wife, who isn't really into wrestling, was sitting in our living room while I had Raw on, and she described Nattie on commentary as sounding "Like a kid in a school play who forgot most of their lines, and just keeps repeating the three lines she remembers"
Not only did the violence in Bioshock: Infinite feel forced to the point of distraction(which is a problem I can see in my brief time playing Uncharted as well), it actually, to me, detracted from the story the game was trying to tell.