kwenlu52
kwenlu
kwenlu52

Could you please provide some more visual evidence? I'm not entirely convinced...

I've never owned a netbook, Lenovo or otherwise, but a model capable of withstanding physical punishment sounds like a good choice for a high school to provide students with!

I just wanted to add a source for the sake of conversation:

Haha that's fair. As I mentioned in another reply, Asus seems to be one of the better brands out there. I have had Dells, HPs, Sonys, and Acers all have something fail on me relatively quickly. Never had a hardware failure on a Lenovo, but I've never owned an Asus.

I hear you, I think PCs in all varieties are over priced. I buy all my computers used. The ThinkPad I'm using now I got for $200 2.5 years ago. It was an ~$800 model back then.

Thanks for sharing that! What hardware needs to fail to be considered in the calculation there? Not to throw doubt on the data, facts are facts, but I'm curious as to what their criteria was.

Oh my goodness. This is so spot on...I don't even know what else to say..

Probably the classiest way to announce a delay.

This looks awesome! A game may finally recapture the feeling of table top D&D

As a general rule for laptops, I do not trust the hardware of any company to not have something fail on me inside of 18 months. My one exception to this is Lenovo. Anyone agree? Anyone think I'm naive?

That is a fantastic one. Thanks for sharing!

Keep pushing. References are great! =)

Very cool. So you basically start with a skeleton of what their history and point of view is, and then fill in the rest. Thank you very much for the reply!

I am a huge fan of Bioware games. Dragon Age Origins and Mass Effect 2 are easily in my top 5. So thank you for the experiences!

Is there any one specific quest in any Bioware game that has stuck out as your favorite?

When writing characters, specifically party members, how unique are they from the start, or how much of their personality is understood at the start? Additionally, your PC's relationships with these party members and how they grow is one of my favorite aspect of Bioware games. How do you know when you've written a

With a game on as large a scale as Dragon Age: Inquisition, how do you even begin writing the plot? Do you start with a simple idea and then it grows into the large game? Do you start with the big picture in mind and then only fill in the side missions? It's so huge (as are many other Bioware titles), I always

Right. I'm saying that that is fine since this is a new universe. Before, changing gender or race of an existing character didn't make much sense. This method makes more sense of the character changes. (even if they're being "carried over" from the old universe. whatever; it's cool this way)

I would agree. It doesn't look very hulk-ish to me.

I haven't played it, but I'm sure that Barry is the best part of it!