onetrueping
Michael Anson
onetrueping

In regards to seasoning sauce, fun fact. A couple years ago, DiGiorno actually tried to shift to a seasoned “New Bold” sauce. The result was a whole campaign of people screaming for the return of the sweet sauce.

Eh, there’s a long history of arcade games with that theme, and so long as they don’t overstep the bounds set down by Steam, I’m fine with them being there. Think of it as the porn equivalent of those cash-in RPG Maker games and the like, and it makes sense that they’d be around.

Steel Battalion. Complete with a scale version of the controller.

Maybe you should take Amazon up on the offer to tour their fulfillment centers. In fact, you should probably take several tours, at different times of the year: once during peak, when most of the workers are temps there for some extra Christmas money, and the centers are working at their maximum capacity; once during

I find it amusing that people think it’s Blizzard’s job to pay this guy, when for the most part they don’t think of doing it themselves. That the concept of paying for something like DBM is somehow sacrilege. The thing that stood out to me was how this guy was barely making it on donations alone, that he had a Patreon

You’re right, this man shouldn’t have to give his time away for free to support the community. He deserves to be compensated for his time and effort. Clearly, Patreon and other donations aren’t enough to make up for the time and effort he puts into such a vital mod.

There’s a reason they stopped doing this: complication. If you remember, a few expansions ago they did a massive overhaul of all of the classes, to both reduce the number of skills available and to more tightly tune the classes to the flavors they were intended to represent. It’s really been an ongoing process, and

The pronunciation with a soft “g” was specifically for the advertising phrase “choosy developers choose gif.”

It’s worth noting that the algorithms used by YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, and other social media sites actually encourage and promote content for being controversial rather than being actually enjoyed or somehow worthy. This was rather exposed recently when Twitter announced the return of the true chronological feed,

First, fame doesn’t mean anything if it isn’t translated into sales. For example, Naruto has more than half of its manga sales in Japan, so claiming that piracy made it famous is ignoring the damage that was done to sales by having pirated materials available.

I think it’s a bit disingenuous to phrase things as being “not afraid” of failing. Failure was a large part of the show, as the crew of the Bebop, as bounty hunters, were struggling to survive from one job to the next. If they succeeded at grabbing and cashing in on every bounty, the basic premise of the show would

No, actually, it doesn’t. Unless the creators of a piece of art have their credits directly embedded in the art, they are frequently unacknowledged, UNLESS their names are already the reason something is being sought after. Further, the people being advertised to are those who are largely uninterested in actually

Which does nothing to address my argument that everybody is acting paranoid, not just cops and not just protesters.

According to your link, 1096 people died by cop in 2016. 159 cops died that same year.

Irrational? Let’s run the numbers real quick, and see if it is.

Ah, I see. It did work last I checked, but it’s been about two months since they discontinued it. Apparently the plan is to migrate those features to the Legion/Companion app instead.

Nah, it’s just a side effect of the MMO style, specifically with MMOs being based on abstract levels. Once you hit the level cap, the kinds of content available to you level out. There’s no real progression at that point.

I find this complaint interesting, because there was nothing added that replaced any of the things you liked to do. Those are all still there.

You’re thinking of two different apps. There’s one that is specifically for missions, and another that is for talking to and managing guilds, looking at characters, and browsing the AH. The second app has been neglected features-wise, but it’s still very much a distinct app.

Scrivener sounds like what you’re looking for. You can keep individual ideas as separate documents, rearrange the order freely, convert documents to folders and back again without any loss of content, and all for a single price. Oh, and you can get an app for taking your Scrivener projects on the go.