planetarian
planetarian
planetarian

EVE is kinda paradoxical like that. To look at the stuff happening on-screen seems like the most boring thing in the world, but when you’re actually playing it and understanding what all that crap is, under the right circumstances it can be some of the most intense gaming ever.

This is a common misconception among people unfamiliar with it — they are under the impression that every space game is X-Wing vs TIE Fighter or Elite Dangerous or No Man’s Sky. EVE is very different from that.

that is absolutely what may happen. the “alt-right” that everyone points their fingers at when ‘pepe’ and similar issues come up is largely just a bunch of internet trolls who don’t actually give the smallest shit about whatever political nonsense they parrot; they only do it to get a rise out of fragile lefties and

yep, there’s a whole category for it. I’ve been streaming my group’s sessions on twitch for a couple months now, though we’re going to be trying Mixer this weekend since FTL is the bomb and we’re mostly only watched by our friends anyway =x

I fucking love self-checkout. Sooner or later we gotta find out how to handle the rise of automation; denouncing it definitely isn’t the answer.

“I stopped playing <insert online competitive multiplayer game here>. Not because of the game. Because of the community.”

I live in Kentucky and have done quite a bit of driving around the eastern US, and never have I seen roads in worse condition than when I went to Detroit. It’s kind of crazy.

notoriously bad game that got a bit of notoriety for its badness. it’s not on the list, of course.

seriously, what.

Erm, maybe i’m not reading you right, but so far I’ve only seen a single hardware-based hack for the switch, and that’s the Team X-whatever modchip mentioned in this article. The other two hacks are software exploits, and the hack for <=3.0.0 switches that’s out there right now is also a software exploit.

I wouldn’t expect it to. This isn’t 4chan or some Hell Group on facebook or something where people enjoy nothing less than telling you to your face how much the things you like are shit. I was merely sharing my own thoughts on the subject. People can discuss different viewpoints without the end goal being to ‘win

Consider me taken slightly aback? I mean, don’t get me wrong, I’m not criticizing you for liking it, nor am I trying to bash the show or anything. I’m still tracking this series and plan on at least giving it three episodes before making a final decision. Just trying to understand the appeal.

this is talking about Japan sales, where the switch sold 3.4 million in its first year, while it took the PS4 just over 2.5 years to accomplish the same.

idunno, I watched the first episode and it felt like a lot of it fell pretty flat or was simply too absurd/non-sequitur to really enjoy. Repeating the first half with different VAs was the icing on the WTF-cake. There were amusing bits but...eh.

part of the issue with that is the debate about being faithful to the source material versus inserting things that weren’t there in the original for the sake of those wanting immediate closure to all missing links. At that point in the books, no such hints had been given.

this is honestly one of my biggest beefs with the prequels. all the tech looked like something not from a star wars film; it was grossly unfamiliar and foreign compared to the original films. granted, i get that it was in a different part of the galaxy or whatever, but still...

part of the problem is expecting all questions to be answered in an adaptation that barely covers the opening chapters of the story. Re:Zero covered the first three arcs of its story, which Subaru basically spends on the defensive, not yet in a position to have those questions answered. That stuff remains a mystery

“I Can’t Believe I Got Turned Into an MMO Hero Who Powers-Up by Groping His Sister’s Breasts!”

while I as an eroge/VN enthusiast do consider the sakura series to be trash, they don’t contain any explicit content whatsoever as far as I am aware, at least as sold on the store. I believe a couple of them can be patched after the fact to add such content if the user desires, but as sold on the steam store, they are

kotaku/etc writers do indeed seem to enjoy editing articles to fix errors/remove spoilers/etc without leaving any trace whatsoever that it was edited, which results in people seeing it after the fact calling out your call-out after you lose the ability to edit it. It’s happened to me before as well =x