kasselvania
Kasselvania
kasselvania

I end up using my Switch every day, both docked and undocked. I walk around the house with it, even. I work from home, so does my girlfriend and we have 2 dogs. I’m sort of constantly moving around and, thanks to a Japanese eShop account, have a lot of great games.

It took me FOREVER to get into the game. I didn’t like the art style or the story structure. But I don’t know when things clicked, but it just happened and I was totally hooked!

Would you say this film is more heavily influenced by the Animated films or the Stand Alone Complex series? I honestly believe that, story wise, the Stand Alone Complex and Individual Eleven are much better tales of humanity within this future...

What formats have you tried? Any chance you’ve given it a shot on an ipad? I feel like that would be such a great method to play it

I mean, I’m not making a lot of money, especially for LA. But I don’t drink, I don’t smoke, I don’t eat out, I rarely buy new clothes... I mean, I even incubate my own yogurt and make my own granola to better optimize my spending.

One great way to insure some financial stability is to have bottom lines and methods in place to keep those in check.

What area of the world you in?! If you’re US I’m amped cause then I should be getting a call very soon!

You too, dood. Didn’t want it to get adversarial! Internet comment boards built for it. And yes, the weekend has been great, thanks for asking!

I’m not buying a mini nes thanks to ‘forced scarcity.’ People don’t just decide and always stay that way. But people just get more annoyed at lame excuses for legitimate discourse. Instead, we get obnoxious, unknowledgable BS spreading.

Yeah, and I compared Nintendo’s production of the Switch to a seemingly mundane Apple product, that is the AirPods. But nah. It’s cooler to find the weak spot of an argument and pick at people with some experience and knowledge than it is to admit that you actually don’t know what you’re talking about and would end up

Nope. Meeting demand would be better for their profits. Because they could, you know, actually get the money.

I agree that this also plays a part. The guys on this board who have never run a company or dealt with manufacturing drive me nuts. This is a multi billion dollar company and people here are like ‘duh! What idiots!’

Go find a pair of AirPods in an Apple Store in NYC right now. Ask them how long it would take to fulfill your order? You might or might not want that particular product but after 4 months, it’s still a 6 week lead time for you order.

The Ps2 was sold out for months and getting an XBox 360 was incredibly difficult too. The PS3 was pretty hard to get as well, but when initial public perception was off about it, the sales slowed down.

Nope. No company wants to have people want a product and not actually sell it to them. I have an. Comment up above about why this happens with Nintendo consoles. It happens with every console, actually. But when Nintendo makes a hit, they hit it out of the park. Everybody wants one, and there’s a plethora of reasons

If you can’t sell the product to a customer who wants it, that’s a problems. Without question. And they didn’t mess up. There’s only so many they could build before selling it. This becomes less of a problem as manufacturing becomes easier with scale and experience. If you want to know a little more about It, check my

The mini-NES was a fluke. This, instead is just an issue of demand outrunning supply. Building a new product is really hard you can’t just start at full speed because most of them will end up with issues. See, production increases over time as the practice of how to build them becomes more set in stone, people become

Of course there’s a reason for people to have that job and stuff. But my learning to do this was at least prompted by my desire to be able to provide myself with whatever I needed. It’s saved me money. Maybe wouldn’t for you. If someone who sucks at cooking tried to learn and burnt all their food, forcing themselves

Eh, I built the media console in our home for, raw parts, $45. It’s a bit like cooking tho, getting all the pieces over time is an investment, but there’s savings on the backend.

I have seen so many stories like this. Here’s a tip my father gave me: ‘put 10% of your income every month, off the top, into savings. Live frugally so when the time comes, you can ALWAYS take the backend profits option’