This menu looks like something that you’d only see in a shooter game. The kind of game that encourages dudes to shoot stuff and blow up other dudes, so for sure it’s gonna call you a wimp if you’re afraid of blood, yo.
This menu looks like something that you’d only see in a shooter game. The kind of game that encourages dudes to shoot stuff and blow up other dudes, so for sure it’s gonna call you a wimp if you’re afraid of blood, yo.
Again: your Canadian experiences are not comparable to ours in the US; and yes, as soon as our private insurance companies can deny us coverage, they will. If the injured party misses a doctor’s appointment, perhaps, they may have to pay out of pocket to reschedule. Little shit like that, but I don’t claim to be an…
Did they combine the 4 discs into one game? Finally? Because I remember being duped by this series, playing the first one all the way through and really enjoying it, only to find out I’d have to shell out $50 in 3 more separate installments, just to finish the story. And I’ll tell you, there’s not a game on Earth…
Because you’re claiming that $3 million isn’t enough for coverage in Canada, where your healthcare is mostly free. And it doesn’t work like that in the US. Here, the most amount of coverage any company will offer customers is $500k, or MAYBE $1 million, although I can’t find that number on any of my plan options.…
In the US, our cities aren’t as cramped, and scratches are not very common.
Go and compare lease prices for new Volvos every 2 years, and come back with your numbers. We’ll compare then.
I don’t own my house, either. It’s not necessary to own everything.
Wow, you’re comparing apples and oranges here.
Hang the hell on—this cost ALSO covers insurance?! WHY AM I NOT DOING THIS ALREADY?!
The fact that you’ve only cited the movies about Nazis and slave owners is EXTREMELY TELLING DUDE.
I was going to make a reference to Tarantino in my comments; both he and Lee are great at writing dialogue scenes, but tethering them to both a story and characters that we can relate to; that’s often their weakness.
I was genuinely curious when I saw this pop up on my Netflix app, but after watching the trailer; your write-up here really articulates what unsettled me about the show’s presentation. The tone of it just wasn’t very self aware, and despite the fact that the original story just isn’t salacious enough by modern day…
Cool profile pic.
Thanks for your reply; I just don’t understand where you’re coming from with this. The trailers for D2 showed a lot of depth and forethought, when we first saw those before the game came out. They’ve obviously hired different writers and employed (at least I think so) more musicians, and both the script and the score…
You see a wider variety of guns in the Crucible, which to me indicates that reducing the number of variables in the guns actually gives players more choice, and more ability to play around with each of the guns and their mechanics. Compared to D1; instead of having a vault full of guns I never, ever use, now I swap…
No. Nobody misses the shotgun jerks hiding in the corners in Crucible. Nobody.
I’m going to compare it to the way Ubisoft rolled out Origins, and took their sweet ass time in doing so. People expected them to pump out a full, complete game on the same annual schedule they’d been following for years, but that strategy bit them in the ass with Unity. HARD. (That game is truly, magnificently bad.)…
The only thing I agree with here is that strikes are a waste of time, but Xur has ALWAYS been mostly a time waster, once you’ve bought off of him a few times. Like, get the eff out of here with Hard Light, bro. I’ve already got 4 of those.
Well... while I do see the apt comparisons to Inception, Nolan ostensibly is telling you throughout that everything you see is/is not/could be a dream, so each scene manipulates those audience expectations in a way that purposefully tries to break conventions (Marion Cotillard looking directly at the camera, for…
A) You made a point (a) but never a point (b), so...?