You have no facts. All you've made are baseless, unsourced statements.
You have no facts. All you've made are baseless, unsourced statements.
OK, buddy, keep telling yourself that. Considering I play all of them, you're outta your depth here.
D3 had a horrendous launch, solely due to the always-online requirement. If that wasn't required, there'd be no bottleneck for the launch.
Wait, you forgot the obligatory "Hold mah beer!"
I believe it is encrypted, much in the same way a system like Xbox will format its own hard drive or a partition of a portable HDD
Probably not, because that'd violate some copying thing. Hell, Verizon lets you use an external HDD for their newer DVR's, but it must be formatted before you can use it, and once you have it plugged in and the DVR adds its own formatting, you can't use it for anything else, and only the DVR can read what's on it.
It helps when you read the article title that specifically states "without firearms."
This just in: people can multitask!
I don't have a horse in the race either way, but I would like to present the following counter argument for your consideration, with specific regards to your last line:
It won't be as significant as not running the route at all, no, but it'll be better than running the full route every day. I would also anticipate some behind-the-scenes modifications of the priority shipping timetables and stuff, to make it merge a bit with the adjusted mail delivery.
Hang on, I remember reading a while ago about how this can only be applied to physical disc sales. If that's still true, and the next generation of consoles moves to digital download or streaming, then this tax is basically a hollow gesture.
Easy fix is to mark paychecks as priority mail, therefore that would still get delivered on "off" days
Dammit, all I see are vaginas...
I see what you mean, but I think that the number of devices that play blu-ray is prevalent enough that most homes would have at least one, even if its through a computer or something.
Hang on, its only getting exclusive streaming rights. You can still just go pick up blu-rays from the kiosk like you do now.
They could show PC...
This, I would agree with. Like a number of other people have said, I personally wouldn't play games on a library computer, but for the library to single out "direct-shooter video games" and make a rule because "the librarians "wanted something more than their own common sense," backing up their feelings about the…
Yeah. When he stopped early on in the video, I heavily anticipated at burnout or high rev or something and grabbed my box of tissues.
True, I wouldn't be surprised if this was just an easy test drive, or if they were specifically looking for a couple things that didn't involve too-high speeds.
Man, someone needs to take that to a strip or something and just leadfoot it. None of this "slowing down for turns" business.