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He’s also the main character of Secret Invasion, of course, made a brief appearance in the presumably non-canon Agents of SHIELD

it’s almost like it’s meant to incentivize you towards the battlepass...

As someone who played Diablo II far, far, FAR too much with my friends... I disagree entirely. I absolutely loved playing as my characters. I had 3. JUST 3. And I had them because I wanted to try out those characters. The idea that, instead of just rolling with “my” character, I’d HAVE to make a new one to experience

One of the big questions with any remake is “why is this here?”—and not all the answers are satisfying. It’s definitely not a matter of preserving history. One Piece’s anime and manga have been around for so long, the kids who grew up with it probably have grandkids by now, but it’s not like those early seasons are

Don’t see any evidence for that tbh.

The Flash was the first movie I saw in a LONG time where several people left part way through. I thought it was a complete mess and was quite a chore to sit through.

As someone with a pretty deep knowledge of comic book lore, I can tell you, it doesn't make them better.

And yet Batgirl was "unreleasable,". F you zazlov

I’ve not seen the three superhero movie/show you mention, so I can’t comment on those. My favourite superhero movie ever is Captain America: The First Avenger. My favourite superhero tv show ever is Gotham, because it’s bonkers and hilarious.

But I thought it was the best superhero movie ever? Are you telling me James Gunn was biased and not a trustworthy source? No way!

If you think this is all about people wanting Reddit to be non-profit, then you still don’t know what you’re talking about. It’s largely about mods depending on third party apis for content moderation. And even then, no one is really demanding that these apis work absolutely for free. But there is a huge gulf between

Reddit and Discord have managed to kill forums and we’re all worse off for it.

It’s unpopular and also missing important context about the pricing and context. Remember that Reddit only had value because these mods do millions of hours of work for absolutely no pay whatsoever. Reddit only has value because of their input. Also, Reddit isn’t merely charging enough to cover their costs, they’re

Absolutely agree. I miss website communities that weren’t all meshed together. Communties you had to find, specialty forums, bbs’s, etc...Social Media was a mistake.

Right, but you don’t make your APIs publicly accessible unless you want to.

The internet was a better place before it was raped by capitalists.

Nothing screams “I’m not bothered or riled up” like a wall of text about how funny it is to you. Reddit is (soon to be was) a platform run by its users, ya dink. All your presuppositions are wrong

Theres one little problem with this argument. The issue isn’t that Reddit wants to charge for it’s API, but that the amount they want to charge is astronomical and way higher than other websites such as Imgur, and the extremely short timeline they gave with pricing information.

I hate how many of the things I’ve liked over the years turning into complete garbage in the name of pumping stockholder value by any means necessary

You know what’s more akin to a landed gentry? Corporate CEOs. The Reddit employees didn’t vote you, ya dickwad (insert Monty python reference).