onetrueping
Michael Anson
onetrueping

allude -> elude

Actually, they didn’t even pay for the art. They used fraudulent charges and chargebacks to get access (it’s right there in the article), the latter actually costing the artist money. It’s the ultimate douchebag action, stealing someone’s art and making them pay for it.

I’m pretty sure most people who proclaim a fear of furries are actually afraid of sex, particularly since it is said sex that they complain about. The Puritans are still among us.

To be fair, the Advanced Race Guide helps with Pathfinder in much the same way Savage Species did with 3.5, including examples of both playable monster races and new races in the back. Very handy book, that.

The majority of games offered are offered as Steam keys, frequently accompanied by DRM-free downloads. The Monthly Bundle hasn’t really dipped into non-Steam storefronts, but there have been bundles for non-Steam games in the past. All games offered have the Valve symbol if they are available as Steam codes, though

The majority of games offered are offered as Steam keys, frequently accompanied by DRM-free downloads. The Monthly

I dismissed your reply because apparently you have a few things to work through. The producer pays for the production, but otherwise has little to do with it. I’m sorry you can’t tell the difference. The rest of your response was, frankly, entirely unwarranted and completely off topic. If you have issues with the

Eh, wrong moment for it, really. Leave the teachable moments to the more serious movies, I say. As long as my laser swords and space wizards are internally consistent I’m happy.

...the implication here is perhaps unfortunate.

That’d be impressive, given that he didn’t have anything to do with this movie...

Sound in space is mostly there because people used to aerial combat expect whooshing and blasting sounds and can’t suspend their disbelief when things are quiet. In other words, scifi has space sounds because people are inherently stupid.

What’s unbelievable about that? If you have artificial gravity, the bombs will go in the direction of that gravity. Once they leave the artificial gravity, they’ll keep going straight. If you’re complaining about artificial gravity in a series that has traditionally had zero weightlessness, then I can’t help you there.

Game Cat has two sites, one of them sponsored. The sponsored site gets the strips a week earlier, while Kotaku pulls from the other site.

You know they edit these things, right?

This post seems a bit Chicken Little. From the page you linked to:

Eh, precision is necessary for these kinds of arguments, I feel, but fair enough.

The chase is a bomb with a timer. You don’t fault the bomb with the timer for not being active, you fault the quality of the scenes based on it. In this case, the scenes were a pair of ill-conceived plans intended to fail: the mutiny and the mission to the casino planet.

Obviously a lot of people didn’t connect with this one (56% audience approval rating on RT).

That’s because the chase sequence wasn’t intended to be the focus for the film. It was the backdrop for the actions that it inspired, and the very fact that it was low on action was part of the reason Poe agreed to the crazy plan. He’s someone who only expected results from action and the constant inaction was

That largely depends on how long she was in vacuum/exposed to radiation and where Resistance hospital tech currently sits. It’s pretty clear they no longer use Bacta tanks to heal grievous injuries, so it’s fair to say that the tech has improved significantly since Empire.

If the Resistance fleet is able to accelerate to a greater degree, is it not plausible that doing so is less efficient than simply staying at a range where First Order attacks are ineffective?