needle-hacksaw
needle.hacksaw
needle-hacksaw

Watching Rilo Kiley opening for Bright Eyes. While I like Connor Oberst alright, I absolutely whent for Rilo Kiley, and fell asleep halfway though the mainact's set. (Which was not his fault, but mine — I hadn't had much sleep. Still, it felt fitting the way the evening turned out.)

Not really all that recent, but since I have never seen it mentioned before here: I'm tempted to say that Lost Constellations, a free mini-episode for a Kickstarted game that will not come out for some time, was actually my favourite gaming experience of 2014.

Yeah.

I too, have read it!

There's also Peur(s) du noir, another animated, strictly b/w movie with a heavy French influence — it's an omnibus, though, with Blutch, Lorenzo Mattoti and Charles Burns contributing. It seems to be even less known than Renaissance, which always baffles me, because you can't get much better known in indie comics

I could imagine that the restrictive order could a result of technical limitation. Which, frankly, wouldn't be surprising at all. It's a small miracle that the game is running on the PS2 hardware already, I think.

He certainly is one of the most distinct ones.

I'm not exactly feeling bad about it. It's just one of those series that Gameologinarians love to talk about, and I essentially know nothing about. So when it comes to FF in these parts, I mostly just do the internet equivalent of staring down on my shoes, rocking ever so slowly backwards and forwards while I sum

Yeah, this kind of bothers me too.
I mean, I am among the people who repeatedly becry the lack of a proper road game (in the sense of "road movie"). And now it seems like a Final Fantasy-game, of all things, will be the best shot at that genre. I seriously am interested in that game. So much so that it's the first Final

The article mentions two additional ones in the second paragraph, and there were 9 movies mentioned in last week's inventory "How to make a good horror movie". I guess that Under The Skin would count as well.

The feature is great, but sadly coming clearly after what I'd consider RPS's "golden age".

Do it, AV Club. I'd read you… even more? Not that that would necessarily be possible or healthy. Still, do it!

Dammit. I thought that I was save, not so much because the game sounded bad, but because the things that are different might be grating to me. But then I had to listen to Roller Mobster, and now I do not only have Carpenter Brut's Trilogy on my mp3-player, but I also kind of want to feel even more adrenaline while

To be honest, your experience with Ori sounds not only like a bug, but like a really poor design decision. Of course it's a good idea to have people set their own save points, but not having a back-up system for cases like this is really… a bit amateurish.

That's a really nice simile.

You, Jesse Hassenger and me. Just the three of us. (Shoot me, I still like the idea of having to choose what music I'd like to listen to in any given week. Also, streaming is kind of hard when you spend a lot of time on trains with tunnels.)

Am I the only person who uses Grooveshark? I started using it back in the day when Spotify didn't even exist yet in our country, and then had the brillant idea to be accessible only for people with a facebook account.

I know that call. I very well know it. In fact, I do know it so well that I asked Valve to delete Isaac and Rebirth from the list of games I own (which is no easy task, by the way). I dearly love the game, but I found out that I didn't play anything else anymore — why struggle to finish a 30 hour game when I could be

This. In yesterday's inventory, It Follows was cited as an example of using more technical aspects as a strength, and rightly so.

She's great in the movie. Also, a professional kiteboarder. Hard to beat that.