ordohermetica
Magister Mundi
ordohermetica

There is an invisible wall remover, so, yes. That can happen. And I agree... which is why the invisible wall remover is one of the first things I install.

Interestingly, I would exactly reverse that equation. They’re all fantastic games, though.

They probably watched other former titans of the tech industry like Radio Shack flounder and fail because they didn’t adapt to changing purchasing trends, and decided not to be one more casualty. Good on them.

Plot twist: THEY WERE THE SAME WORLD THE ENTIRE TIME!!! :-O :-O :-O

I liked the sparks and splashes of color. Fantastic atmosphere. The text for the tutorial was slick, too.

But, yeah. It had to be a 3edgy5me game.

I used to do that at Radio Shack all the time. Although we almost never recommended Best Buy, because so many customers complained about poor customer service (not sure if it was a local thing or if there’s something larger going on such as understaffing).

But our manager always had the philosophy of helping out as

It’s a autonomous territory. It has a flag. Taiwan also has a flag, despite being an autonomous territory rather than a full nation. Also, provinces have flags. States have flags. Some cities have flags. Full nationhood is far from a prerequisite for having a flag.

I mean, I can’t deny that it would be effective.

...you have to be misremembering this one. That is not a possible ending (I’ve meticulously gone through every one of them - I’m kind of a fan of the game - and every ending is very well documented at this point). You always must finish the fight at the Hoover Dam, no matter what avenue you take. Even if you remove

I agree with you about most of them, but regarding New Vegas... huh? Meeting Caesar happens about two-thirds of the way through the game. There’s still quite a bit of stuff to do before the end after meeting him, even if you DO decide to immediately load him up with C4 and blow him sky-high, which I may or may not

My car disappeared on a crash, too. Fortunately it was registered as destroyed and I got a replacement from insurance. Still, paying a $1000 deductible because the game bugged out was annoying to say the least.

That happened to me three times last night. It was particularly eerie when the dude who was trying to gun me down in a Buzzard sort of floated out of his cockpit as he (and everyone else in the session but one guy who had just finished a heist with me) disconnected.

On the bright side, I guess, heist guy and I were

...no, really, it's just you. It's a very common term. Although it is somewhat impressive that you managed to miss it being used for all these years. That's quite some trick of chance.

...they weren't primary developers in Wasteland 2. That was inExile Entertainment. Obsidian helped, but they weren't the main people behind it by any means.

Or the theory that Navi is the one who died, hence the absence, and that the stages of grief are for her. But either way, death is almost certainly involved.

I mean, the entire game is surreal, disturbing, and basically Japanese horror (the masks really just drive that home, plus the body transformations) lightly disguised as a game for all age groups, so... yeah. That makes sense.

And to the south, Eugene is considerably weirder. But hey! It's an unofficial city motto now, stolen or not.

Oh, good. You're scaring people away. Carry on, citizen!

Alas, I'm running out of time sitting at my desk (it's like I need to actually do some work before the end of the work day or something... strange), so I'll just add this in response to the extra material on your edit:

I think the main fallacious assumption is that people wouldn't otherwise discover their fetishes if

...but it's not exposure to sexual violence or child pornography. That's kind of the point: there are no children being exploited, and no one is being harmed. In this situation, it's clearly fantasy.

I suppose you could argue that humans are so bad at differentiating fantasy from reality that being exposed to, say,