madcatz
madcatz
madcatz

Whether or not that's true, hardware limitations have definitely shaped the battle system of Final Fantasies. FFX, in particular, they wanted to do away with separate battle maps, and have players come across enemies as a natural part of exploration (as they did in FFXI, for example, once it was on PS3 and PC),

There will be a new destiny game every 2 years, according to the contract the LA Times got a hold of. So, like...1.5 years from now.

I remember when Benoit first won the heavyweight title. I still believe to this day he cried real tears on that day. It was not just another page on a script. It was a culmination of his career, a validation of his years of hard work. Never have I seen more real emotion on a fake stage. It was hard to not feel at

He means that it doesn't summon until the next turn. All you have to do to keep it from summoning is either A) kill Mimiron's Head, or B) get them down to 2 mechs

I went to a residential high school as a kid. They shut off all wifi at midnight (we also weren't allowed to have any TVs in our rooms or leave our rooms after midnight). Of course, a high school is different than a university; we were mostly under 18, and they were pretty much still responsible for us.

Again...it was loads stronger than anyone else in the top 7 except for Oregon. FSU had the 15th toughest non-conference SoS. Alabama had the 19th. Ohio State had the 37th. TCU had the 50th. Baylor had the 84th.

Three of the teams they played are bowl-players this year. And compare that to, say, Alabama's non-conference schedule: WVU, Florida Atlantic, Southern Miss, and Western Carolina: 8 games below .500. Ohio State's, Baylor's, and TCU's are even worse. And the committee has said that they want to reward intent, and

FSU had one of the highest-profile non-conferences schedules, though. Notre Dame, Florida, Oklahoma State...can't really argue against that. It's their in-conference schedule that was weakish.

So, I can't be the only one that tried to switch to my Facebook tab at the 1:25 mark to see my notification, am I?

The World Ends with U2.

That would mean the very first tiebreaker in a division (head-to-head record) would be based on one single game, played at a non-neutral site. No thanks.

Huh? All teams in a division do play home and away.

A slight tug on the receiver's jersey right before that.

He did redeem himself (as much as someone can redeem themselves from something like that...). He hit the game-tying 3 on their last possession of double OT, and hit 2 free throws to clinch the game in triple OT.

I feel the exact opposite. All play-in games should be between at-large teams. If you're the 65th team to get in, you shouldn't get to avoid the play-in game, while a conference winner has to play a play-in game.

There's actually a stat that tries to calculate that. Wins Above Replacement (WAR). The best of the best hit about 10 WAR in a season. So, in other words, if the best player in the league got injured (and the team didn't make trades to replace him), the team is expected to win 10 less games (out of 162). In

The funniest part is the ball-carrier attempting to hurdle the tackle from the now-nonexisting tackler.

It wasn't originally in the game. Developers put it in the DLC after players spent countless hours looking for it in the original game.

For receivers, at least, reestablishing yourself in bounds only matters if you were forced out of bounds, not if you went out voluntarily. That may be an NFL rule, though — not sure if it's an NCAA rule. And obviously don't know how and if this applies to fumble recoverers.

A jRPG that starts with the hero's spaceship crashing on an unknown planet? Now THAT'S something I've never seen before.