joelovestoastoo
joelovestoastoo
joelovestoastoo

Same-ish. I used a G15 for years and years and finally replaced it two years ago with a G710+. The USB passthrough port stopped working about a year in, but I just contacted support and they want me to send it in. I’ve had a G600 for even longer without issues, although I replaced it recently with a new one because a

Moonglade, maybe? It was sort of like Acherus for Death Knights. You get a Teleport spell that can take you there around level 10 or so, and (at least it used to be, I haven’t played much post-Cata) have to go there to learn how to shapeshift every so often.

I mean, Ravenholdt was already a sort of class hall before class halls. Like SI:7 in Stormwind. Strange that both of these are mostly Alliance-centric. Almost like the Alliance is full of sneaky backstabbers...

at the same time this shouldn’t set a precedent for people to be able to play a game for 25 hours and then get a refund because something they saw in a trailer 3 years ago wasn’t in the game.

Which begs the question: If I had to dunk 50 hours in for the good part, then I get to the good part and I don’t like what I’ve found, do I deserve a refund?

If an author writes a book that he never shows anyone - does the story exist?

From what I’ve heard, that validation only works until the next update, so the game needs to be activated again after every update. This means if you update the game but don’t actually launch it while still on the internet, you can’t play. IIRC, this came up in a thread where someone was wondering why their copy of

Nah, Denuvo is actually decently disruptive from what I’ve heard. It’s not exactly always-online, but it basically operates like it is after a certain point. If you don’t have a steady internet connection or expect to play your games offline, you’re likely to run into problems.

Well, then you have a piece of wood rather than plastic. I wouldn’t be all that surprised if someone had, considering people make tower cases from wood occasionally. As a hobbyist thing, there are definitely people that build their boards from the ground up. People post parts / progress pics all the time on the

I think people look down on them because they’re not Cherry switches but I’ve seen pretty good things about Razer and Logitech’s boards that use their own in-house designed switches. I think Logitech just completely switched from using Cherry and stopped making the two boards that used them. I seriously doubt most

There’s an order of magnitude in difference between the promised and cut features of Fable / No Man’s Sky and other games, though, and that’s the point. I would argue that very few games are released these days where the features described in promotional footage differ significantly from the released game to the point

To be fair, graphics change but it’s easy to spot a bullshot and look at it differently than an extended gameplay demo.

Is it really unfounded speculation on the part of fans when there are features explicitly identified in pre-release trailers that are not in the actual game? Yes, some fans did decide without reason that this was going to be the game that did everything they hoped and dreamed, and that’s an issue. The much bigger

You’re probably going to want to pick up about 7,000 floppy disks. Maybe make it 8,000 in case they release updates.

That’s clearly the only way to run it. Better hop on NewEgg and order a GTX480

Sean Murray suggests making sure your graphics card meets the minimum spec. Have you tried that yet?

A Day 1 patch will make a difference but hard crashes that bad this late in development are very troubling. That’s the kind of stuff you get rid of as soon as possible. If the gold build still has it, that’s what all of the people without internet access are getting and it probably means they have no idea what’s

It’s because it was basically a generic first person shooter with classes skinned as robots. Most people went into it expecting it to be more mecha based and it just wasn’t. It did improve a lot but I think that was the biggest thing it had to overcome and there wasn’t really a way to do so.

Just to be extra clear since it seems like you missed the point, it was not my question and I do not give a shit in the least. It’s a thing some skeptical people said, and the devs have seized upon that as infomercial-style marketing: you won’t believe the amount of content! It sounds entirely possible but whether or

Honestly, these days, I feel like most people’s growing skepticism toward games that have insisted on showing little before release has been rewarded. Most of them have turned out to have little content or issues with longevity. I even waited a week with The Division and only bought it after playing a RedBox copy and