lexgamer
lexgamer
lexgamer

Edge of Tomorrow was one of my favorite sci-fi/action flicks of the year. Just seeing Tom Cruise do self-deprecating was worth it, but it took a pretty novel concept (with some borrowing from Groundhog Day and other flicks) and made a really refreshing shoot-em-up.

From the oldest and best of the CCG's...Magic: The Gathering, and a card called Millstone. 2 colorless to cast, and taps to put the top two cards of an opponent's library into their graveyard. (Originally released in Antiquities)

the term milling comes from a MTG card named millstone, which served a single purpose of discarding cards from your opponets deck into the graveyard. Lots of control decks where build around the millstone which had the sole win condition of using the mill stone to outlast the opponent, as in MTG if you cant draw a

Magic: The gathering card "millstone", lets you put the top 2 cards from your opponents library into their graveyard.

"plunge his thumb into the Postmaster's box"

Well, terminology helps to understand. But actually, at the beginning I thought all those names were a bit scary :D

The major hole in this idea is that the article is hardcore meta gaming. Basically using the knowledge that it's a video game explain the lore. Look at it from the other side and it's not dystopian at all.

They didn't think that multiplayer would be popular over LAN. That's pretty good.

I can definitely see how it'd be possible to take nearly 200 hours to finish everything in Dragon Age, especially if you're going after things like the shards. Unfortunately, I don't think the game provided much motivation, outside of "hey, it's something to do, so...do it, I guess?"

Now playing

Also, everyone should know by now that spoons are a really scary thing if you know how to use them.

Turns out the kid took the advice and picked up a copy of "50 Shades of Grey." He then went outside and stepped in front of an oncoming bus. Win/Win for everyone.

Yeah I've managed to get ahold of the rarer Amiibo somewhat easily. I originally started with Marth and Villager by randomly checking about a week and a half ago on Amazon (UK) and they had restocked, so ordered them. Captain Falcon I got from Argos (a British catalogue retailer) along with Wii Fit Trainer on Xmas Eve

Hi, I dunno how much you know about this stuff so let me try and explain:

I don't like it simply because it doesn't make any sense in the universe that the game takes place in. the actual sights on these guns aren't for the Spartans to use, they're for use by the Marines who don't have power armor.

Forget about the mysterious pad. Who the hell plays this far away from their TV??

For that month only, the Xbox One's sales beat the PS4 sales. On that month. And that's in the US only, too.

Haha, definitely the former, but that's America (and supposedly the UK also), not global.

What about their promise to add support for 2 gamepads?