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It might be possible this could occur for a short time and a small portion of the market, but this is so counter to how the Internet functions that I don't see it happening on a large scale. TV has always been about a limited selection of channels. From the start the Internet has been about access to thousands of

I checked out some gameplay footage of this and it struck me how similar it was to Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit's gameplay. Both are from Criterion Games, but it's still remarkable how influential Burnout was that EA allowed Criterion to adapt it to the NFS franchise.

Ah, FlatOut how fondly I remember you. At that time a race game like few others and impeccably optimized (I could run this great looking game at 60 fps on every system I owned, which is saying something). Your sequels were a bit too repetitive and strayed away from the cheap, rural banger racing/demolition derby

I wonder where we'd have been without the Space Shuttle detour. It did a lot of great stuff, but at a cost equal to Saturn/Apollo. And that was only going to get cheaper as the tech matured, meaning more could've been done on the same budget.

Ignore this

I'm surprised that The Farm 51, whose titles are fun, but decidedly B-movie level, games would have the money to come up with/license technology that can produce such nice visuals.

Being on top in the console war is good for the stock price, so that adds to the incom from the gross sales.

While in previous generations consoles were pretty different, the PS4 and Xbox One differ little from how they work with PCs. Same for the Steam Machines. They are also PCs but like consoles are designed to be used and look great in the living room. The difference is that they can be opened up and be fiddled with.

Windows can be installed via USB if I'm not mistaken. And the traditional consoles are very closed compared to these. You can't open an Xbox and pop in a new graphics card and have it work, but with the larger Steam Machines shown above you have that option. You also can't ever install a new OS on a PS4. Even if it is

Steam Machines aren't designed to replace desktop PCs. They're living room PCs designed to replace closed-off consoles like the Xbox with a more open range of systems. Because they're so open they can be used as desktop PCs: you can install Windows on it and add a mouse and keyboard if you so please. But everything

There's like at least 4-5 episodes that will make me teary-eyed consistently. No other show does that. It wasn't always perfect, but when it stepped up it outshone the brightest diamonds in the sky.

I think the whole rehashing argument is caused by Nintendo re-using its characters, especially Mario, and graphical style for a large range of games. When you look for a puzzle game, platforming game and sports game on the PS3 you'll find three games with three different characters and three different looks. Do the

Don't remember Kirk/Spock sacrificing himself to safe the ship in Space Seed. Don't remember Kirk/Spock yelling Khan. Don't remember the hands on the glass in Space Seed. I do remember all of those things from TWoK. That's why it feels like TWoK and not Space Seed.

I read the article, but I simply cannot agree with it. Maybe it'd work for the broader audience, but for Trekkies like me it doesn't. Kirk dying at the end would've only made me hate the last part of the movie even more. The only way Paramount would allow the team to handle it would be a return of Kirk/Pine in the

Bad homage is probably the best description. Describes the intentions of the team behind as well as the outcome.

Probably a small team that first want to work on the platform they know. I have no doubt that this'll come to consoles eventually.

The underground factories of the Nazis, such as Mittelwerk and Project Riese, are also interesting to look into.

Why?