onetrueping
Michael Anson
onetrueping

Nor do I have the interest or desire to do so.

Not strictly true. There are plenty of things that are available through legitimate means that are still pirated. This includes books, movies, music, art, games, and so much more.

Cips are open pieces of metal that hold a series of bullets. Magazines do the same thing, but are enclosed. Don't ever play a realistic WW1 or WW2 shorter, you'll just embarrass yourself.

Large SSDs are slower and more prone to failure than smaller ones, so a hybrid drive makes more sense in a use-case where individual programs use large amounts of space.

Large SSDs are slower and more prone to failure than smaller ones, so a hybrid drive makes more sense in a use-case

Arabic inspired, not Muslim inspired. The two often go together, but it's important to note the difference, especially these days.

Yes, by the time of the patch Classic is based around, each faction had multiple Auction Houses, and they were linked in content as well (patch 1.9 linked them).

Now, I’m clearly speaking for myself, but I do enjoy a certain amount of muscle. As far as I’m concerned, everyone should have their own ideal self to reach. You be who you want to be, and you’ll find the right person. Heck, being who you want to be gives you confidence, and that is downright desirable.

Board games are fantastic, if you can do scheduling and proximity. If you can’t do proximity, there’s always Tabletop Simulator.

There are a lot of variations of these, and some are listed under craft supplies. Five dollars got us a VERY large bag of sparkly balls, and they are now all over the place.

There are a lot of variations of these, and some are listed under craft supplies. Five dollars got us a VERY large

That's pretty much it. Epic chose the least friendly option for a new storefront and did it while they had nothing to compete with except whatever they had in the store. No features, no price competition. And yet, some people are so angry with Steam that they can't see what damage is being done.

He chose not to go on the platform because he’d be forced to be exclusive to the platform. He states multiple times that that was his primary reason for not being on the Epic Game Store. The email states this, and is the reason for the decision. Whether Epic approached him or not is irrelevant, they stated that it’s

That’s literally what the blog post said. Complete with email screenshot.

Those little cannibalistic murder machines have always been cool, you were merely fooled by their teddy bear appearances. One look at those glittering dead black eyes should be all you need to see just what they really are, however.

More likely they saw an opportunity to save a pile of cash in printing costs.

Sounds like you’ve been around some crazy-looking polygonal barns, my friend.

Interesting take. Personally, I’m of the opinion that these people are working to preserve our culture before it deteriorates entirely, as people recklessly destroy and discard any remaining portions of it instead of taking proper care of it.

Not really, since the board itself is the actual protected item. Electronics collecting is inherently different from other types of collecting since keeping the items in working order is more important than keeping them pristine. Recapping boards is fairly common in retro computing circles.

It’s only industry-standard when it comes to consoles, or with major publishers sequestering their own games. The bought exclusives for a digital platform is entirely new on PC, and a large part of why I’m personally refusing to touch the EGS.

Epic is currently throwing around their money to make games exclusive to build interest in their store. What if, instead of spending money on exclusives, they let the publishers publish where they want, but discount the games and pay the publishers the difference? The publishers still get the money, the game is

Considering how most MMOs dole out soulless fetch quests through random NPCs, it has more to do with the quest design rather than the source. Rather than dotting the landscape with random NPCs giving out the same quests over and over, Bethesda set up a limited event using a single NPC that reskins that kind of game