Would be funny if this got viral enough and Lebron ended up actually wearing this sign for fun at a game.
Would be funny if this got viral enough and Lebron ended up actually wearing this sign for fun at a game.
Company announces thing. Consumer feedback suggests that not only is thing highly in demand but that company is woefully unprepared for expected demand. Company puts thing on hold till it can figure out how to actually supply thing well enough to meet demand.
That would be awesome to play as him in multiplayer. And every time you kill someone, he does his Jurassic Park laugh.
And before everyone else does it....
As you again posted this article, I will say this again:
Read the articles you post
...but my Shepard was male...
That shit don’t fly in Japan. Work ethic is important on a personal level over there, a much higher average than here in America. You don’t miss work unless someone died, even then, working past the grief over there is viewed as admirable and resolute. Of course the society and its viewpoints are changing as a new…
RPG’s are supposed to immerse you into the role of your character. It has nothing to do with numbers. So simulation and RPG are actualy pretty close to eachothers. I don’t consider games that don’t let you do meaningful decissions for your character RPG’s, because you are not playing a role. You are just playing a…
It’s fucking uncanny!
Looks like TF 2 for me
That voice acting was hilarious, any idea if they were trying for any real world accent?
So are the Fallout games, with the added benefit of the series still living.
It’s hard to take the stalker franchise seriously when the Fallout franchise exists...
Arabs and Jews working together against a common enemy!? What’s next; human sacrifice, cats and dogs living together....mass hysteria!
Title specifically states world boss.
This is the fucking internet. Nothing ever dies here.
Look, let's be honest—the only reason we know enough about Kirby and Ditko to know that they were exploited is because Stan Lee tirelessly promoted them the same way he tirelessly promoted himself. This was a guy who made sure the letterer and the colorist got credits in every issue, decades before it was industry…