jamestaylor03
HarlequiN QB
jamestaylor03

@DarkPGR: I have backwards compatibility and I'm still excited over the prospect of this. Colossus in high def with a solid frame rate? Ooooh heck yes. Stuff preordering though, especially before it's even officially announced (if it ever is).

@Souffrir: Nor is Portal a sho... Okay, it is, but only on a technicality!

@MichaelPalin: There is no privacy issue as nothing links the data collected to either you or your console - it's just a data point floating in space with a lot of other data points.

@CoffinDodger (If the typos crap. Blame my keyboard): Zenith (if you can find it), 60's/90's sci-fi super(anti)hero eldergods mashup of awesomeness. Also huge gobs of Strontium Dog (especially between the "two deaths" when Johnny is just one seriously PO'd badass).

Now playing

It's not from a film, but the intro movie from Left 4 Dead is probably one of the most impressive I've seen. It's set up as a full on action sequence, but at the same time It's a tutorial for every major mechanic in the game; all the special zombies and what they do, car alarms, how pipe bombs work and so on. At

@astrogea & @collex: "look at it as a Richard Prior comedy that just happens to have Superman in it." It's a crap Superman film, it's a funny Richard Prior comedy. I would never defend it on it's strengths as a Superman film; but that doesn't make it not fun.

@TVs_Frank: Superman III is awesome, as long as you look at it as a Richard Prior comedy that just happens to have Superman in it. Makes me laugh every time - love it.

@holy holes batman: Y'see that is the reason why the two shows are completely different. Bear is a trained survivalist, and he shows techniques required to survive, sometimes when those techniques are not actually required in his current situation. He's not complaining because A) He's not particularly hungry at any

@wild_world_girl: Funny, after reading two of your posts I wouldn't apply the term "whining little bitch" to just Les Stroud... You're not Bear Grylls undercover are you?

@Arken: So that's new is it?

@mintycrys will Vanquish you!: The music sounds like it could have come from an old SID chip - that's a chip for an 8-bit computer (C64), so yes it does sound pretty 8-bit.

@ModernBawhair: London bridge was the name given to many different bridges over the years; None of them was this one. This is Tower Bridge - the current London Bridge is far less interesting.

@DeadnBuried: Or don't bother - I finished the game and really wish I'd just given up when I got to chapter 3.

@TehLastTimeLord: It's been up there before, that's how I got to see it a few months back. I guess they've removed it for some reason.

@Ben Babcock: Not only is it a known form of temporal Paradox, but it's also one that's been used in many other well respected time travel stories. In fact it's used in the vast majority to some degree:

@Reavyn: Children are more than capable of walking past a sign long before they are capable of reading a Potter novel, or before any reasonable parent would allow them to watch one of the films or read the books too them. Plus it's not the image that's scary in and of itself (although that might be enough) but that

@hdgotham (Hannah Wilson): Nope, the movie and the book were written at the same time (the film as a partnership, the novel by just Clarke), with ideas from one being transplanted into the other.

@Aklost: I take it you've not seen many people paint or draw in the flesh as it were? There may be a handful of geniuses out there who could scratch that up in 10 minutes, but for the majority of artists somewhere between 1 and 5 hours (And we're assuming they could do it to that level of quality, I know I couldn't).