keelo
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keelo

I don’t know about the Seinfeld video, but there’s a substantial difference between driving on the White House grounds in a car and driving a golf cart on a golf course.

Back in April of ‘16 it was widely reported income from JUST Shark Cards was at $500 million. I remember reading somewhere, but I can’t remember where, that they’re pulling in something in the 8-figure range per quarter in microtransactions, the vast majority of which are Shark cards.

See, I think they know exactly what they’re doing. This isn’t about cheating in GTAO, it’s about scraping together some good press to distract from the OpenIV debacle. *That* was what they were actually going for, taking out a widely-used feature that provided incentive for single-player gameplay. They don’t want

Yeah, probably. There wouldn’t be a legal argument in support of the hacking tools, so Take Two probably gave the the option to voluntarily donate the profits or try to take on a multi-billion dollar corporation in court.

I have a hard time believing they couldn’t make a ton of money if they sold a paid DLC pack porting the GTA Online content to the single player game. I’d drop $20 to finally have something to do in single player again.

That doesn’t really hold water, though. In court, all they’d have to show is monetary damages. “Your honor, using the defendant’s hacking tool, a player is able to create near infinite in-game money with no effort. Here’s our selection of paid DLC that provides in-game money, and here’s the results of a player survey

They hate the single-player fanbase, because they haven’t been able to work out a way to further monetize it*. OpenIV gave players something to do in single player after beating the game, which is something Rockstar hasn’t seen fit to do in several years. I have no doubt that going after the online hacking tool was a

Take Two doesn’t give a shit about cheaters in GTA Online, they just needed a blast of good PR after the OpenIV debacle. They probably just Googled “GTA Online hacks” and firebombed the first search result.

OpenIV isn’t really a single mod, though.

I have a $300 laptop for running my Windows shit. The argument that I should spend twice as much as an XBX for a gaming PC because it can do a bunch of not-gaming things makes no sense.

As long as my console of choice, this gen the Xbox One, remains available for sale and continues to have games, I don’t give a shit which company sells more consoles.

Well shit, I was wrong. It can’t be done offline.

She was four. I know, it’s only two years, and fucked up is fucked up, but there’s every possibility that she can’t remember not having been raped.

Counter-point: he raped a 4 year old for two years, stopped because he got caught, received a slap on the wrist, and is still probably going to waltz into an MLB contract. A hit piece is the least of what he deserves, and far better than what his victim got.

If you want to feel worse, only three teams have removed him.

I’m not honestly sure. I only ever tried it once, with Mass Effect 3, and literally the next day, all three came to EA Access. I don’t think I have any discs, but if I do, I’ll go offline tonight and check.

That’s also a really good point. They could hardly have picked a methodology more calculated to make BC look bad.

“This feature my preferred box doesn’t have is sporadically used, so let me argue that more options is somehow worse.”

And there is the truth of the matter. If Sony does it, it’s a mandate handed down from the heavens. If Microsoft does it, it either doesn’t matter, or it’s not good enough.

Install. Not download.