I mean, if I was going to add things to tea that I do not want in my tea (like milk and sugar) I would use an Assam.
I mean, if I was going to add things to tea that I do not want in my tea (like milk and sugar) I would use an Assam.
So if I were to be chosen for this and then, upon arriving in Hawaii, just run (or more likely walk) away and treat this as a $6 one-way ticket to Hawaii, would I spend the rest of my life eluding capture by the Arby’s corporation?
I’m just sitting here with a direct sourced Darjeeling SFTGFOP and recoiling in horror.
Games also do not need graphics, sound, subtitles, the color blue, a save feature, or controller options. But nonetheless (almost all) games are better for their inclusion.
It feels super weird to me for people who are not the artist (or even like close personal friends of the artist) feel like they have a perspective on authorial intent that is more authoritative than anybody else’s.
It’s pretty weird how attitudes towards “cheating” in video games have evolved over the years. I remember when I was a kid, the primary value of things like “video game magazines” was that they had the cheats in them. I knew one kid who was was briefly the coolest kid in school since he was the first in his peer…
I just have the biggest conceptual problem with eating liver, as the organ is fundamentally a filter for poisons which is not something I want to put in my body, even if it does taste good or is ethical. I mean, it’s not going to be more ethical than cauliflower, probably.
At the grocery store yesterday, I spent like 25 minutes unsuccessfully hunting for a single serving size full fat plain Greek yogurt (I needed a half-cup for a recipe). So I’d really appreciate it if there was room in our hearts and shelves for just one more kind of yogurt.
Allison wins with the first 2 picks. She could have picked like sandpaper and motor oil and I’m still going to go with whoever has mustard and raw onions (I would just leave those other things off the actual sandwich.)
I mean “tip double the tax amount” is a way to save time in figuring how much to tip, not a way to save money.
So one of the reasons I became a fan of Bioware to begin with was my fondness for single player RPGs with choice and consequence and well written NPCs. I simply do not see how that sort of thing is compatible with a “live services” approach.
Feels like we can account for the effect simply by giving women awards, a plan I support.
I will say I find the Epic Store’s lack of “community features” as an argument for using that service instead of Steam. I find those generally detract from the experience.
I mean, I’ve never put any of my pots or pans in the dishwasher. As something which gets real hot in the course of using it, I’m not really relying on the dishwasher to disinfect anything. So as long as I can get “whatever is stuck to it” off, I’m good.
I don’t really like the idea of playing after the ending in New Vegas, since the actual ending refers to far reaching consequences of your actions (beyond what’s reasonable to implement in a mod- certain locations would have been destroyed in the battle that leads to the ending, important characters go off and do…
I’m just going to call hamburgers “beef discs” now.
I didn’t even know you could take out soup. When I’m feeling crummy, I drag myself to the Pho joint and sit there miserable and eat my delicious soup. I could have been taking it home?
Gearbox is not wrong to take the money (and a bigger cut of sales) for their game.
I mean, it’s not a terrible idea. Classic problem with all forms of stuffed chicken breast is that unless you have a perfect seal then you’re going to spring a leak when cooking. So if you never have to flip the thing, then you can rely on gravity to keep your cheesy goodness contained.
Unequivocally: Any option user may select to make the game more enjoyable is a positive thing to include.