It’s the other way around though. Twitch was perfect for every other conference, while Youtube shit the bed on half of them. The sound issues were not twitch’s fault, Sony’s audio crew messed that up.
It’s the other way around though. Twitch was perfect for every other conference, while Youtube shit the bed on half of them. The sound issues were not twitch’s fault, Sony’s audio crew messed that up.
Monster Hunter’s coming to all platforms, not just PS4.
I’m partial to XxBox_GokuxX, personally.
Stupid sexy Mercer...
4chan is 99% comprised of 10-17 year olds, so I could honestly care less about what they think.
Oh this will be perfect for the Switch!
You are correct.
Probably because it would be stupid to split a generation over 2 systems? Black 2 and White 2 came out on DS after the 3DS was out
Thanks.
I fully intended to switch to standard controls after a few minutes of play, but I could not put down the motion controls. They were incredibly satisfying and outside of some initial hiccups where I would accidentally block, I never felt like I wasn’t in total control of what I wanted to do.
I’m curious to see if this…
Overwatch Free Weekend and ARM Global Testpunch :p
but if one comes then more are already probably in the pipeline and this is the ice breaker to start getting that fanbase over to the Switch.
1. I also think Morrowind is the best Elder Scrolls game.
Folks who are saying you need to "understand" the request and "explain the consequences" or "redirect to another activity" have no understanding what this is about.
This is for repetitive requests for the same activity, sometimes after a explanation, many times without.
Sometimes a parent answers no simply because…
I think this technique at least addresses the first part—making sure kids know that you've heard their question. (That is, unless you end up just saying "Asked and answered" mindlessly, which is not what this is recommending.)
I understand that you are feeling disappointed. You prejudged parents who would use this technique and assumed that they are not very good parents. Instead, maybe you could try assuming that most parents do try to explain things to their children and do try to help their children understand their feelings. Maybe…
My daughter is six, and I've tried something very similar already. It did not work. What did work is making sure she understood that I had heard her question, understood her reasons, and the reason I'd said no. Still not 100% effective, but better than "because I said so", which really means "I can't be bothered to…
Okay, you can do your caring, emotionally sensitive answering first. If you've never seen a kid repeating "but why?" or "but why not?" or any "but..." after that, you need a different strategy.