Your whole “you literally can’t” count to twenty aloud within a second test/example is hilariously silly and pointless in this scenario.
Your whole “you literally can’t” count to twenty aloud within a second test/example is hilariously silly and pointless in this scenario.
I would say “not worth it” isn’t the best way to word this. Maybe it’s more of a “I’d rather have spent that money on something else.” Because that’s exactly what it is. Buyer’s remorse. If there are other things you realize you’d rather have spend that money on, the opportunity cost was too great.
Value or worth is…
I would assume that Nintendo of Japan and its leadership has more sway than the American group, simply based on the fact that it’s traditionally a Japanese company and a good chunk of their talent and legacy is of Japanese decent/origin.
I agree that a president of anything can and should be held responsible for…
Nintendo already makes games for mobile. Crazy profitable games. And their newest home game console’s biggest gimmick is that it’s a handheld, but comes with a dock.
Also, what’s with the mobile hatred? Android is just a platform. If you actually care about gaming, the industry or the games, then let the games speak…
Uh-huh. Because the literal scavenger hunt/game of iSpy would be more fun/rewarding if they were like, “It’s here on this door, bottom left. I’ll stand next to it so you know which door, in this room of a single door!”
Two circles and a square? That’s *not* close enough. Next you’re gonna post a picture of just three random objects relatively close together and be all, “look! Those three cars in front of me? There’s three! That means Mickey Mouse!”
I’ll bet you can punch *way* harder, though.
Mission accomplished.
*Sigh*
Verum Rex’s core gameplay, music, art direction and characters are fulfilling, but the story is a convoluted mess - you really can’t judge it by the story, and anybody who does really doesn’t understand what made it a great property to begin with. It was never about narrative, never about the end result of the tangled…
I’m excited for new Armored Core. XD
Which, when you think about it, is kind of nuts. You have four+ years to work on a thing. You can’t make one of the most appealing gimmicks fit in to the closed-box that is single-player? Sheesh.
Played a bit of the beta or whatever that was.
I hate the camera in battle. I speed of character movement acceleration is jarring. The special effects/flashy attacks are too frequent and too much - not only would the camera pull back way to far, but the opponent and everything else on screen would get lost in the…
First time violations come with a punishment right off the bat? Not even a warning? What needs to happen is a conversation of, “hey, you’re influential [or maybe not] - can you try to chill with the stuff that perpetuates anger towards our friends and families?”
Pushing people away because of their bad habits isn’t…
“I know that some employers publicize their restructuring plan to improve their financial performance by letting a number of their employees go, but at Nintendo, employees make valuable contributions in their respective fields, so I believe that laying off a group of employees will not help to strengthen Nintendo’s…
If you typed that on anything but a stone slate while sitting in a mud puddle and starving to literal death, you’re on the list, bud.
Disagree. The failure is on the part of whichever executives are responsible for long-term outlook of the company, strategic handling of the various sectors/departments, planning, whichever one(s) are in charge of managing hiring and efficiency, whoever is ensuring that they’re hiring for jobs they need long-term,…
I’d agree that it’s not a sign of “doing poorly”, but a sign of poor management. It’s too big of a change. Surely you don’t think they got to this point of needing to react so severely due to the planning, strategic advising and market analysis of one of their front-line grunts, right?
One might consider needlessly padding the HR files with excessive cost to being with, leading them on to think that their positions were long-term, then letting them go with relatively short notice is, in fact, a failure. Not all failures are abrupt, in-your-face, point-to-the-guy-that-lost-money sorts of events.
Execut…