In fairness, as a native of the state, I can tell you that a lot of Ohioans have the same reaction to Skyline.
In fairness, as a native of the state, I can tell you that a lot of Ohioans have the same reaction to Skyline.
First smart move I've seen him make.
It's not the end of the main plot. It's the end of a post-endgame raid, which is literally just a really hard boss fight that's now been beaten really fast.
how is it a spoiler when it doesn't give anything away or show you anything (unless you click on the video)? A game has a boss at the end….STOP THE PRESSES.
Lol. The fact there's a really big Vex at the end of the Vex raid as a boss is a spoiler to you?
What are you talking about? This is a way to bring something digital into the real world. As a collectible, or an ornament. The examples you gave, and the train of thought you're on, have absolutely nothing to do with this post.
this shit is out of hand.
You don't say? A franchise that's 14 years old has generated more money than one that's a month old? Color me surprised!
And i love that it wasn't just some fraud who took all the money and then ran away with it. He actually organized a potato salad festival, made a lot of people laugh, and helped charity quite a bit.
I love that such a silly joke snowballed into such a big thing. I know there's a lot of humorless gits out there who will harrumph about how this damages the credibility of Kickstarter and all, but it's nice to know that the world has a sense of humor.
"We have such a beautiful, perfect child! Oh, what an amazing day. Honey, what should we name him?"
LEGO builder Thomas Benedikt has big dreams. He wants to build a LEGO version of a Super Star Destroyer. And yes, there's an official model of an SSD already available, but it's only 4-feet long. Thomas wants to build one over three times larger.
It's very similar to the potato salad, just geekier and perhaps more artistic. They are funding something they want to see made being made. They are getting enjoyment out of its existence. That's the benefit to them.
See, I've never been concerned with labels. If people don't consider video games art, fine. Not sports, fine. There doesn't need to be some agreed consensus about what they are or they aren't as long as you enjoy them. I find the people who insist on characterizing certain creative outputs or activities as such are…
It was not, in fact, mandatory. If you completed all missions (not even including the DLC missions) you could get about 5200, I didn't do any multiplayer until after I beat the game on my first playthrough, and got max galactic readiness.
If it's as fun as it was in Mass effect 3, I got no complaints. That I had absolutley no faith at all in Mass effects having multiplayer, but I enjoyed it tremendusley.
Uh - no, not in the slightest?
It really isn't, though