If you’re having Fifty Shades of Gray style sex, you need to go to the cops, because you’re being raped.
If you’re having Fifty Shades of Gray style sex, you need to go to the cops, because you’re being raped.
Your average runner inflicts more pain on themselves than most people involved in BDSM. Any sort of contact sport can give you just as many bruises. Do you also condescendingly tell athletes to stop doing what they enjoy?
There’s a correlation between participating in BDSM and better mental health. It’s not clear which…
It is perhaps a petty issue, but there are plenty of other organizations doing equally good work, so you’re not really doing any harm by supporting someone else.
It came out a week ago. Expecting a sale is a bit much.
No VR support at present. The developers have expressed interest interest in adding it; the big limiting factor is very few PCs could run a decent size park at a high enough frame rate and resolution for VR.
It lost a few things on the management side, but as a creative platform it was definitely an improvement.
The problem is that running a large park at high enough frame rate and resolution for VR would take an insanely poweful computer. Making a game that lets users add an arbitrarily large amount of stuff, has thousands of on-screen characters, and looks good both zoomed out and from a first person view is hard to…
They’ve raised the possibility of eventual VR support, but the big problem is that getting consistent 60+ FPS in a big park would require a very, very hefty computer.
They haven’t released any details of post-release updates, but they’ve definitely suggested their will be some sort of additional content (they’re probably waiting on sales figures before deciding exactly what to do).
I feel this review was a bit too harsh on the management side of things. Yes, it’s absolutely a building game first and a management game second, and there’s very little new on the management side as compared to Roller Coaster Tycoon 3 (better guest AI is the only significant thing). However, there’s also not that…
Keep in mind that they can’d do anything too different with new character movement without having to totally re-balance every map.
Cosmic Encounter/The Iron Throne is a short enough game that you don’t get nearly as mad about the inevitable betrayals as you do in longer games.
Does this give substantially better results than doing a circuit of exercises? Because it seems massively more boring.
Neither confirmed nor denied. I’m guessing the developers hope to add it, but aren’t sure if they’ll have time.
Most are pretty much the same. Some of the monsters that are Wizards of the Coast IP (e.g. Beholders, Ithilliads, etc.) aren’t in Pathfinder (though you could use them from the 3.5 D&D books without changing them much), while Pathfinder has a much larger collection of published monsters simply by virtue of having more…
On the game vs. narrative tool spectrum of RPGs, I’d still put 5e firmly on the game side, just slightly less far than Pathfinder, with something like Fate in the middle, and something like Fiasco on the narrative tool end. Of course, a particular group can take the most complex, simulationist system out there and…
What are you ordering to get to twenty dollars? Burger, fries, and drink is maybe seven per person with tax.
And In-N-Out’s owner’s Christianity inspires them to pay employees well above market rate. I’ll excuse them some extremely subtle Biblical references.
In-N-Out is nowhere close to being the best burger I’ve ever had, but it’s far and away the best sub-four-dollar restaurant burger I’ve ever had.
In N Out uses fresh potatoes for their fries, which sounds great in theory, but in actuality most people find that freezing potatoes prior to frying improves texture.