nightwander24
Nightwander
nightwander24

You can’t maintain a bad, bloated, and often harmful system because some people don’t want to look for a new job. Imagine you’re talking about coal miners, saying the exact same thing. Should their industry be propped up, despite the harm it does, because they’re concerned about transitioning to a new field?

I think I agree. Probably you should lose your right to hurl a baseball in the direction of a batter if you can’t reliably keep it from hitting him in the head.

On one hand, this is clearly unintentional base on the speed, choice of pitch, the body language of the pitcher (dejected, staring at hand), the reaction of the catcher, the score and situation, etc. Ridiculous he was tossed out for throwing at someone.

I did! Outside of the genre and a few quirks (like your units getting critical strikes under certain conditions, like if your flier is over a mountain tile), this is a 1:1 recreation of Advance Wars.

Wild how we always have enough money to buy some bombs and jets and arm our allies, but as soon as the notion of providing our people with health care or a greener planet comes up, we’re broke.

This woman needs to have her child taken away from her for the child’s sake. 

If your turkey is disappointing, you’re doing it wrong.

This app is also available for Android. So, add the link and stop focusing on Apple all the time

AOC’s snark game is on point.

There’s. NEVER. just. one.

A writer saw an interesting thing in a game and pitched a discussion piece about it. This is something that’s always been in the games; it’s acknowledged among fans (myself included) and worth writing about.

Yet another “why is this even an article on Kotaku?” moment.

Women being bullied in the video game community is NEVER a topic that is ludicrous to talk about. Kotaku keeps talking about this because assholes like you keep ignoring that it’s a real problem. And yes you are an asshole for dismissing things like this article as “ludicrous.”

Christ, you’re an asshole.

Oh, come on. The writer loves the series, dislikes this aspect of it, writes a piece that explains what happens in the games and what might be behind it.

Part of what Ario is exploring in this piece is why this happens in these games—the extent to which it is elements of the community, the content of the games, the culture of game difficulty, etc. Plenty of possible factors. As Ario also points out, most of the messages in the games aren’t like this.

I’m glad to see a high profile article on this subject, because this has been always been the worst aspect of these games and is a major reason I never bother reading other player’s messages past the first week or two of release. The worst part is those consistently see higher ratings than actual helpful messages or

Tebow looks like he’s worried the pitcher is going to throw him a curveball. And we know Jesus Christ no help with curveball.

Nothing annoys me about Apple products, because I use PC and Android.