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    Hmm, I don't know terribly much about TAS, but from what they said in the TAS section of the recent AGDQ, it's actually now at the point where many strategies that were discovered by TAS-ing a game are being used by regular speedrunners. There were several runs during ADGQ2014 where they even mentioned that a given

    Actually, what you're suggesting is far more complicated. With an inlay the force is spread over a large area, which requires a sophisticated sensor that sums up the pressure across the whole surface.

    It's not that unreasonable actually, there's a big difference between being able to withstand an 8-fold impulse for a tiny fraction of a second, versus having to actually hold it for any continuous duration. It's simple physics.

    "Best of Kotaku" - header image is a butt joke.

    Thanks, I did read the article. I honestly just wanted RicemanFTW to share why he thought it was 'retarded', 'stupid', 'asinin', 'insert-homophobic-slur-here'.

    elaborate

    Did someone say Clap Trap?

    As the article says, it was actually originally intended to be dug up in 2000, so they're actually already late :P

    That's super cynical m8

    I'd argue while the texture quality definitely counts for 1998, the poly density is still way higher than what we saw back then.

    Shakes fist

    Now imagine how magnificent that feeling must have been during the moon landing. Here's hoping we'll get to share more collective experiences like that in our lifetime.

    That makes me curious, since the modern definition is in terms of time, what's the history behind a second, and how was/is that standardized?

    It does sound like this could easily be the 'hottest new shows on the history channel', doesn't it?

    So basically It's Syndrome's glider from The Incredibles

    If you have HDMI -and- Mini DP, was adding a clunky VGA port really necessary? That's easily the largest port there and it certainly seems like it may have limited the thinness of the body.

    YOGALBO? (You Only Get A LifeBelt Once)

    like for example, that while on a ballistic trajectory, the seat pendulums would not actually work since they'd be in free-fall. In fact, this would probably be a somewhat safer if the seats were just held in place and couldn't spin.