jckrbbt
jckrbbt
jckrbbt

You are projecting. You are applying your opinions onto others, based off your experiences, and data you've gathered or been given, over a product or products that aren't even for sale yet.

Gaming freedoms? Is that the 28th amendment to the constitution I've been hearing all about?

Right or wrong, I appreciate your logic on this. I've tried to suggest here what you are getting at only to draw the ire of Kotaku readers. Mainly it led me to re-evaluate Kotaku and its community. I still visit here regularly, but the sites you've listed almost unanimously provide more journalistic articles, and have

Actual journalism has no place on Kotaku. I'm going to have to ask you to leave.

Kotaku used to be my Go To site for gaming, but the last few months, the quality has been on a steady decline. I tried to stick it out, but combined with the comments, it just wasn't worth the frustration. I discovered Joystiq and Polygon and enjoy them infinitely more. Jalopnik, on the reverse, has an amazing

I'd swap Kotaku for Jalopnik, (or for anything, really) and I'm on board.

When people have an opinion that doesn't match yours, your website, or your friends, that must clearly mean they are wrong.

Act like a jackass in the media eye, get more media. Sounds about right. Remember that line in Batman by Nicholson: "This town needs an enima!"? It feels like that tow is our media these days. We idolize the worst aspects of people.

This looks completely cool and would be great as a feature of something else, but on its own, it just doesn't appear to be very fun.

I feel like you guys are stalking me. About a week or so after I add a new artist on DeviantArt, they show up here. So either the stalking thing, or you just have impeccable taste in art.

This is exactly the thought I had when I saw who worked on this title.

Younger people these days are historically against censorship. They are strongly against CISPA and are indifferent about their own privacy. With 1.1 billion users, I think it's impossible to identify Facebook to a generation.

This is exactly it. Replace "marijuana" with "privacy" and I think that's what we'll be looking at. It's easy to try and view the future through the eyes of today, but time changes everything.

Bear in mind when those people run for office, most of the voters will probably be their age or younger. They'll have the same disregard for privacy, and higher tolerance to historic activities. I'm interested to see how it will work itself out as the Baby Boomer generation dies off and changes the entire terrain of

Don't get discouraged, and don't be afraid to talk to people. You are going to have to take some chances to meet people. Reading a book isn't that big of a sacrifice if the reward is meeting new people, is it?

I've found divorced people make great candidates for friends. They have a spot in their life for companionship; if they have kids, they may not have full placement and now have more free time than they are used to; they may have spent the last X years dedicated to their family life, and may not know how or where to

Great post. I completely agree. Friends may no longer be a requirement for hunting and gathering, or making sure you don't get beat up on the playground, but they will continue to enrich your life, provide you with value as you do the same for them, and create a network of ever-increasing opportunity. Your comment of

I would be your friend! My wife and I also don't have kids, and don't plan on it. I am surprised by the number of people in a similar situation that feel like social life has nose-dived, but are receptive to doing stuff they like in a group. A lot of time, just asking people about their interests will form a

Perfect way to end the work week. Thanks for this!

Hey, I'm a busy adult. I don't have time to formulate my own opinions. Thank God for TV! After a marathon of Stepwives of Rich People, I'm out of time to get informed over issues. These news programs are my Cliff's Notes to opinions. Luckily, all my acquaintances are just like me, so no one challenges my thinking,