mariospants
mariospants
mariospants

I thought we had this discussion before: isn't there a strict definition of what a "supercar" is supposed to be? An NSX - while killing itself out the gate with their stupid "NO, Papa, 'A-K-U-R-A'" launch ad - is a great sports car, it's never been considered a "supercar" has it? Maybe a race-prepped version with

I have always loved the look of this car, and the other 1970's "holy-shit-what-is-that-thing-on-wheels" concept cars of the era. It reminds me a lot of the car Deckard drove in Blade Runner, so yeah, it's very Syd Meadish, too. My dad had a book from the late 70's that featured all of these funky concepts, I've got to

Wait, what is THIS? Whatever the costume looks like, it's up to the producers, they can go with what the book describes and carry it from there, but Kiki does NOT "cop attitude". What's with the whole "hands-on-hips-I'm-more-hip-than-you" pose? If this is an official photo, the movies' f*cked right there.

You know, comparing it to the actual car photo, the artist DID make the wheels a little bigger, didn't he?

It's not an 80's Lambo poster if it isn't airbrushed and has the Alpine logo on it...

... and NONE are better than mom's.

oh yeah, me too... I guess I'll have to hit up google for a kolache recipe to indulge my NEED.

If I disable the speed limiter on my Veyron, does it void my warranty? I'm more concerned about that than breaking the world's speed record...

With you on that - FarCry3 was the first game to break the monopoly Skyrim was having on my computer. As a child of the 80's, I'm buying this game on the humor principal alone.

When I read the title of this article, I immediately thought of the song in Carousel of Progress, which made the fact that Leigh referred to the ride a nice surprise. Unfortunately, Leigh, that catchy little tune was replaced by a different song after GE dropped out of the picture. It's apparently the original song

I'm not promoting the Twin Z as a paradigm shift in terms of design, but for just a few minutes looking at those images, I had the same impression of untouchable futurism that I had when I was a child reading books about future cars. Tres cool, I love it.

If the EA online service for Simcity was akin to a Cytrix-like environment wherein you could log in and play your own city on any device then it would be considered a triumph and worth of inclusion in a single player game. Note, however, that even THAT kind of functionality doesn't preclude the ability to play the

What I got from Daniel Cook's article here is a big, fat whine. When you work as a cog in the big machine (reasons: to make money and to learn something to advance your career) don't diss it afterwards as if their entire culture missed some big, important point that only Daniel Cook can understand. If your boss'

not to mention that often the best photos are the ones taken when people weren't aware of the photographer or BEFORE the photographer asks permission (just ask the afghani girl who's face is pretty much the most famous photograph of all time).

The dealership salesguys don't yet seem to realize this car exists - they keep showing me GRAND Cherokee and saying "See? It's not that radical"

I wonder if there's a business to be made around this kind of service... you know, crowd-sourced stolen car return?

Just checking out the video on CNN... Miyamoto does NOT AGE.

There's a lot of "useless and dead weight" in ALL companies (two-man outfits run by geniuses excepted) - there was a hell of a lot of talent working there that, under the right direction, could have put out amazing games.

Having worked in the industry (and the software industry in general) it seems extremely odd that Disney didn't shop LucasArts around. Even in the current economy, the company was worth *some* money. Development studios are expensive to put together, and if the non-creative IP (that is specific sound effects and

Let's not forget that 99% of these storied European brands would be relegated to the history books were it not for the willing American market. I also doubt that Land Rover and Jaguar would exist today were it not for Ford's past ownership of them.