ngaungau
Cheese Addict
ngaungau

I bet someone is already working on 3D printer blueprints for this thing.

YES. Calvin and Hobbes the anime series!

I have no idea what any of this is but I want it very so much badly please yes.

“Expect”? I’ve already had one.

The only appropriate response.

Welp, time to get a Wii U.

This is pretty and all, but I’m still just going to buy a console to play this game, and then enjoy all this Gameworks stuff five or six years down the line when I have a much nicer computer and can get the game during a Steam sale. Did the same thing with Arkham Asylum and PhysX.

But then why are Americans and Canadians easier to confuse than North and South Koreans?

Now playing

Does that trailer say that it was animated by the people who did the CG Doraemon “Stand by Me” movie? I haven’t seen it, but that movie actually looked pretty good from the trailers, and true enough to the original in terms of character design. Weird that this movie looks so terrible in comparison.

Can I say the same thing about America and Canada, then?

I love TMBG. And their three songs about hair are ridiculously catchy. (I count Purple Toupee.)

Are you actually going to compare South Korea to North Korea? They’re not exactly very easy to confuse.

It’s okay, they’ve already watched it all anyways. If it isn’t torrents, it’s bootleg DVDs.

Akira. Now go watch it and bear in mind it was made in freaking 1988, before computers could do any of the stuff they put in that film.

Spirited Away and Nausicaa.

Spirited Away and Nausicaa.

“The terminology that I deal with on a weekly basis for work.” That’s the definition of jargon, by the way.

I’ve always wanted to try a Monster Hunter game, but a friend described it as “Multiplayer Dark Souls”. I’m a fairly casual gamer, I was hoping for a Zelda-type experience. Gonna get the demo and hope it has enough gameplay to give me a real taste. Will this game entertain or aggravate me I wonder?

Don’t limit yourself to gaming jargon. “Mobile” in this case is the same as “portable”. As in “mobile phone” = “portable phone”. The word is the opposite of “immobile” (“not moving”).