mancubusjam
mancubusjam
mancubusjam

Call BS on what? I am on my sofa with a wireless keyboard right now. Only reason I'm not playing some multiplayer something or other is my gf is out with her friend tonight.

Sat on a sofa now, typing on my wireless keyboard, looking at my 42" tv. You can do almost anything with a PC, beats the hell out of console, tv, tablets, all rolled into one.

People with living room PC's and wireless pads?

It's a mole because poor eye sight! Nicely played, Ubisoft!

In an interactive medium like computer games, as with art, the work is in some sense incomplete until the observer engages with it. You could engage with it as a system to be understood, a forum for competition, a piece of porn, a series of flashing lights, or in countless other ways.

Is this what a "straw poll" is? When a straw man counts those who bite?

Can confirm. Don't find it a fantasy, and am a man.

If we play computer games for power fantasy, then why do games like "I Am Bread" exist? It's such a bullshit bit of psudoscience.

Wireless mouse and keyboard on a laptray.

About as practical as when they stop to eat their sandwiches with chopsticks, and wash it down with orange juicethey drink from a shoe while sitting in a tree. Why are they doing this though?

What issues? It was just plug and play for me. Just make sure the tv has a good refresh rate to keep up with a high fps. There is a CPU in the living room but I could trail a wire under carpet or stick it in an entertainment centre cupboard if I or my partner cared to. We have a sofa directly in front of the tv for

Mine is on my 42 inch tv. Plenty of space.

"and now she's humping his brains out less than 24 hours after he's recovered and her parents have been killed," also felt unnecessarily stilted and wooden."

I think that was supposed to be her wanting to "feel" something, anything, positive. I thought it worked and made sense. They both just wanted to feel alive.

Donkey Kong Country was self-aware enough to poke fun at itself. In the level "Tree Top Town," the developers put a banana at the bottom of the screen. The inference was clear — you should barrel blast yourself into the bottomless death pit. As it turns out, doing so does not result in a dead ape — instead, you're

Plus there is the gentleman's code that you basically finish whatever credits you have when someone is waiting, don't spam your monies unless it's quiet and so on.

Love Letter is alright. I still found myself getting a bit impatient when I was out though. I haven't played those other 2 though, but our group usually stays away from more aggressively competitive stuff. I can see your point though that the THREAT of death can add an interesting dynamic, one that possibly stops

Oh, also, how many turns does it usually take before the final mission turns up? (I know it depends how well you finish the regular missions) Don't even know how far we are from victory at this point. Man, wish you could save game cheese it like the original. ;)

Wow, I'm getting utterly destroyed every time (on easy). You can get wiped out so easily. For example, had a bad first turn and lost quite a few men, so next turn we were conservative with money and bought 3 more men, only for 2 of them to die instantly without even entering a fight due to an evil "!" (forget the

Yeah, gridless games like this are few and far between. Most board games are pretty set in stone. I feel like Luke hasn't played that many board games with the amount of emphasis he is putting on fluidity of rules. The first 1-3 times you play a game, you might mess up some rules, but once you know a game, you know

I disagree. I've only played it 3 times so far, but I am far from done with it, and this is only on the easiest of 4 difficulties (ignoring "tutorial"), and there are 6 scenarios too, that change things quite significantly as far as I can tell. I wouldn't recommend playing it single player at all, your head will