masserectman
The Book of Mormon Freeman
masserectman

Let’s be real.

Whenever they use the politics, note that it is a dog-whistle for “politics I don’t agree with”.

“It’s no use! Take this!”

Can’t wait for the r/KoktakuInAction incels to start brigading this thoughtful, needed post because they can’t handle systemic racism in this country.

How is New York McDonalds?

Agreed.

So you’re saying that North Dakota is so bad that their favorite fast food In-n-Out, a chain that doesn’t even have a location anywhere near North Dakota?

I would disagree and here’s why.

Bloodborne was also developed by an entirely different team than the one that did Dark Souls II. Dark Souls II was very much From Software’s B team, as indicated by Hidetaka Miyazaki taking on a supervisor role instead of a director role, which he’s done since.

I personally think that the amount of women who are using things like Tinder or Bumble for free meals is low, but not insignificant. I mean, we know that there are people out there who go to clubs simply because they know that they will get free drinks out of it; extending it to meals isn’t that far-fetched.

To me, the most interesting aspect is that Andrew Stanton (the director) originally wanted a big “twist” where it was revealed mid-way through the movie that Marlin was so over-protective of Nemo because he lost everyone else rather than in the beginning.

It’s clearly Jim Spanfeller’s idea to try and artificially raise the number of “clicks” that these articles are generating.

Except making games is hard, especially for a new generation.

Great article Nathan and it just highlights the disconnect that these huge streamers have on reality.

Chad has its own connotations though.

For the first guy, I agree with Nerdlove.

Visual Effects work might be the only software engineering sector that is even more grueling than video games.

Dark Souls 2 had its weapon degradation tied to your framerate so people running at higher framerates had their weapons degrade faster.

I would argue that the stronger emotional moment is when Carl goes through the scrapbook and realizes that Ellie has documented their entire life as one long adventure, with her telling him to write in his own afterwards.