Writers/writing teams are kind of the super stars these days since the prevailing attitude among buyers is to follow writers and not characters.
Writers/writing teams are kind of the super stars these days since the prevailing attitude among buyers is to follow writers and not characters.
I love it too. The pacing is a bit uneven so I wouldn’t say it’s my favorite, but it’s definitely top three.
I guess some people aren’t too quick on the uptake?
I don’t understand why people continue to think Phil should be behaving within the strict conventions of society as we know it.
A childhood spent watching Fleischer cartoons has left me with that notion about most things.
And the doldrums are... well... down in the doldrums.
I would swear that was faked were it not for a long history of Fahey being a total weenie about this set of thing.
Try to spend some time paying attention to what a monster does and trying to avoid it. Look for patterns and openings.
That cramping was legit though. I’ve only ever had a problem with cramping with MP:H. I am exactly median human male size, so pretty much everything is designed around my proportions. Yet I had to play it in 10-15 minute intervals, the cramping was that persistent.
I think I can understand why they might have done that. If I was going to make a one line blurb about KSP that I knew lots of people with varying interests would see and use as a recommendation, I might go with something like, “It’s pretty good”.
I’m afraid that never crossed my radar back in the DS days, so I’ll have to take your word for it (I’m sure I could find a copy, I just have no idea when I’d actually get around to playing it, for the first time in a while I have a back log of games and a whole lot of work preventing me from doing much about it).
Or blindfolds...
These are the guys that made the Prime series a success.
I don’t get it.
I mean, technically grubs and insects are prey.
*cough* Armature *cough*
Huh, that is a bit lame. I always thought alchemy was an interesting conceit because it was magic with a veneer of science. It’s the systematization of magic that made it distinctive. This just sounds like straight up high fantasy with a historical bent.
Paradoxically, space-time and relativity may be an argument for the existence of free-will. New research suggesting the brain may act as a sort of quantum computing device may open up new ways of approaching the subject.
While I’m not sure I entirely agree with the concept of free will, isn’t the idea of it’s existence really a matter of circumstance? As a species, we seem to have fallen ass backwards in to the capability to think about such things merely by our ancestors being in particular circumstances, none of their own making,…
Not exactly. “God” being omniscient, omnipotent, and all. It’s more like, “He chose diamonds for ME, and death for YOU”.