helpiamacabbage
PossibleCabbage
helpiamacabbage

I don't know about faith, but I have no interest in VR. Basically any sort of technology that requires me to wear anything on my face or head that I don't normally wear is a non-starter for me.

My six Shepards: Mallory, Malachi, Malena, Malcolm, Margot, and Mojo.

And almost all of this stuff is going to turn out mostly meaningless or something you have no interest in using after the first 20% of the game.

I love hot food and have never found a crunchy snack product that is as spicy as I would like (even fuego Takis are a little milder than I would prefer). I will have to try that "Flavor 855" Doritos.

People who play Call of Duty are gamers, people who play Farmville are gamers, people who play Warhammer 40k are gamers, people who play Dungeons and Dragons are gamers, people who LARP are gamers. What use is the in-group/out-group policing?

It's also not a Dwarf or a Qunari, even though the Inquisitor can be. But the operative issue is that nobody who's going to play the game is going to be a Warrior, Rogue, or Mage; nor a Dwarf (of the fantasy variety), an Elf, or a Qunari, but there will be both men and women who are excited to play DA:I.

Honestly this generation transition is just like the last five generations I can remember.

I very much liked the "Bloculus VR" from Wayforward

I was pretty iffy on VR to begin with, and I was leaning towards not getting a Rift but this seals that I absolutely will not get one. So it's a positive move from that position. If VR really is the future of gaming (ugh, I hope not) then I hope that there's a competing product of quality, since I want nothing to do

$399 may be well below MSRP for the Xbox One, but I would hardly characterize a $399 gamebox as "cheap." I've personally never paid more than $250 for a gaming machine, and I've had multiple consoles in every generation since the second.

You're misunderstanding how the world works. Things happen, we have emotional response to those things, then we resolve those feelings with thoughts, then those thoughts influence our behaviors, which in turn lead to events, which restarts the cycle.

Everything you point out is a reason someone could conceivably dislike a game. That's fine, you can dislike a game for any reason you want. They are not, however, things that everybody must agree are problematic. Certainly, DA2 recycled dungeons, but I don't care about that. The strength of the game's writing more

Whether a game is good or bad is 100% opinion. There is nothing more to "this is a good game" than "I like this game" and nothing more to "that is a bad game" than "I didn't like that game."

Dragon Age 2 is my favorite Bioware game., bar none Mass Effect 3 has my favorite ending of any video game of all time.

Where's my "better Fallout game using the same engine that comes out after Fallout 4" though?

Honestly, Bioware is my favorite video game studio, and I like what they've done post-EA much more than what they did pre-EA. "Ruined" is a matter of opinion.

"• A turn-based strategy game where you time travel with werefoxes except halfway through you realize you're really not all that important to the plot."

I'm pretty sure they're talking about things like Madden and FIFA where "using the current teams and players" is a big part of the appeal. 10 years from now, the people who play Madden because they really like football won't want to play the game anymore since NFL teams in 2024 aren't really anything like NFL teams

Really depends on the cookie. Chocolate chip cookies should be firm at the edges and soft in the middle. Sugar cookies should be uniformly chewy (or alternatively crisp, they're just different styles). Oatmeal cookies I prefer crisp. Florentine lace cookies wouldn't make sense as anything but crisp. Sablés are

I generally play a Khajiit who wants to repossess all of the forks in Tamriel for religious reasons. I tend to keep them in a big pile in the basement in one of my many homes.