“whether you knew it or not”
“whether you knew it or not”
It is commonly known. It’s just a slow day at Lifehacker.
This has been common knowledge for decades, regardless of whether you personally knew about it or not.
Seriously? This has been known since the late 80s.
Wasn’t that only for Mega Man 3?
Yes. Every few years someone who didn’t know about it finds out and it blows up all over again. This was known amongst my friends back in the early 90s when we played.
The link you provide about why bigger cats can’t purr explains exactly how smaller cats do purr.
For those willing to roll up their sleeves with a totally legal copy of the game, RPCS3 offers a path to emulating the experience on PC.
Read the fucking article, asshole.
The only two types of entities who would cheat are either 1. Psychopaths, because they lack empathy and thus don’t particularly care about the downsides, and 2. The seriously mentally infirm who are wholly unaware of the downsides of cheating (let alone the specific knowledge that they’re cheating) and thus…
Something akin to the times when glitch speedrunners come across something that even helps no-glitch speed runners get faster at a part or the game.
If he were banned now, the reason would be one guy just saying “I shouldn’t have lost”, which isn’t reasonable.
Then a new bank claims that they got robbed, they don’t have any proof if the robbery actually happened or who it was, but they blame the same guy because “he used to rob plenty of banks before”. It shouldn’t work like that.
He admitted he cheated as a 12 and 16 year old.
Better we assume someone else cheated in a game and drag em through the mud at any given opportunity.
Cheating is cheating. Doesn’t matter whether you cheater a little or a lot. Cheating is cheating.
Why was he allowed to compete at all? Why are people with an admitted history of cheated allowed to compete?
It is literally legally the age of a child.
So... a child then...