mookalakai--disqus
Mookalakai
mookalakai--disqus

I was 7 when the Phantom Menace came out, and although I haven't watched it in its entirety since then, I really have no strong memories of the movie, except for a lot of pod racing.

I like the story of him staying in his hotel on July 4 during the Constitutional Convention, basically doing his homework, while Franklin and other delegates are out partying because it's goddamn Independence Day.

I like Madison because he was a huge, lame dork that probably shouldn't have ran for president. But still, slavery.

I haven't checked the calendar recently but this comment must mean it's opposite day.

Compared to the clean cut Nazi hair of every other First Order soldier, his weird mane was really bad and annoying. I thought the force mind reading battle between him and Rey was probably my least favorite scene in the movie, because it was just zoomed in shots of people grunting and sweating, and Adam Driver didn't

Also a couple of young studs arguing about whether Emilia Clarke is hot enough for them to bang. They think she's a 7 at best.

Even taken at face value, their complaints don't really make any sense. Apparently the male heroes in the movie don't count because Finn is black, Oscar Isaac is too Hispanic, and Han Solo is too old I guess.

For me it was Emma Watson, but I know exactly what you're talking about.

I know, they even had the game set in Boston! Fallout 4 had some good music selection, but I was disappointed with re-used songs from Fallout 3.

In that scene where he was talking about Vader, I thought he was going to turn and there would be a poster of Darth Vader in his room.

He would have been pretty easy to find, seeing as he was dead in 1973.

AC Syndicate totally squandered the potential of having two protagonists. It isn't until the final mission of the game when they actually make use of both characters for interesting game mechanics. I still really liked the ending of Syndicate, at least the ending of the VIctorian stuff. The modern day storyline is

Bobby Darin was at the March on Washington, that's got to be worth some genuine credentials.

Joined a game last night where I destroyed an APC with 3 people in it right when I landed. Don't know if they ever forgave me for that.

John Hamm is great and all, but he was kind of terrible in Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt and Wet Hot American Summer. Perhaps intentionally so, and still kind of funny, but I don't think he is really praiseworthy for those roles.

That's a good point about length. There are alternative endings to quests and all sorts of stuff in Dragon Age Inquisition and the Witcher 3 that I'll never go see because those are like 70+ hours games full of open world stuff that isn't really fun to replay. And I replayed the earlier games in both those series a

A good expansion, but it still lives in the shadow of the better, New Order.

Even if I ignore the shitty PC port of Arkham Knight, which honestly didn't sour me too much on the game because I didn't have too many technical problems, I don't understand how anyone though the game was so praiseworthy. There's nothing I liked about that game that Arkham Aslum or City didn't do better.

Video games can fill you with such a great sense of control over your life, accomplishment and success, all of which are really hard to obtain in real life. Which you like you mentioned, is a double edged sword because it really doesn't translate to real life, but I've had days where I feel better and more confident

Been playing Helldivers on PC for the last week, and it's definitely my favorite game of the year. It's the first co-op, or even online multiplayer game I've sunk myself into for a long time. The way it's both really challenging, but easy to understand and not frustrating when you die is great. The online community