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As a tremendous SEGA fan—it’s a difficult life, I assure you—I can only agree with this comment in a modern context. In the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, the criminally underrated Phantasy Star franchise went to places that other RPGs wouldn’t for years; the Shining series, RPGs and SRPGs all, was a total blast throughout

Your entire post could have been “I know you were technically correct,” and we all would have been much better off.

No, the incorrect pronunciation in a country that has adopted the word does not need to be respected. This is both disrespectful to the source, and anti-intellectual. I presume that it also bothers you

At this point, I believe we’re having two different discussions, and I’m admittedly getting a bit frustrated.

What I’m attempting to explain to you is much more thorough and far-reaching, including an extrapolation of realities within the industry, design conventions, and bars set, and you are stubbornly only observing

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Overwhelmingly, the responses seem to boil down to: “long, scenic drives.” That and hooning. Scenery and hooning.

For me, it’s the former, plus something else I haven’t seen mentioned: geeking out about hybrids and hypermiling!

Gasps from the crowd, I’m sure. I don’t blame you! Stay with me, though... talking about them

When you had originally posted, you implied with a “You’re kidding” that this was wholly unfathomable. I endeavored to explain to you why it’s much simpler than you believe, not to provide examples—but I can do so, with some further explanatory context for padding.

Very few domestically-released console titles have

You’ve surely heard this before, but your pet peeve is a pet peeve of mine! I see no point to it, nor have I ever been convinced of one. Something is from another culture, yet trying to respect said culture with accuracy is seen as... annoying. No particular reason, really; it’s just disliked. Can any explanation be

Oh my Goodness.

I’ve looked up the video, and that is indeed a very late ‘70s or early ‘80s Amana Radarange. I think it’s an early ‘80s model—which, after a cusory Wikipediaing of “American Hustle,” means they missed things by a year or two, I think—and... oh Goodness. That poor thing...!

I could make quite a long post

I DON’T KNOW WHAT THIS IS FROM BUT I’M A HUGE FAN OF CLASSIC MICROWAVES AND I’M PRETTY SURE THAT’S A VINTAGE AMANA RADARANGE BEING DESTROYED AND I AM VERY OFFENDED.

Sincerely,
Proof that everyone with every fascination exists on the Internet, will find you, and will comment on your innocuous funny post, possibly in an

I don’t mind helping you understand what I’m talking about.

I’ll share a simple Wikipedia link regarding Tencent first, as it explains within the first few paragraphs how positively tremendous their company is. While understanding that the country is populated by over a billion people, keep in mind that Tencent is

This is a tangential conversation at this point, but: Chinese voice-overs in any game developed and published by a world-leading studio is not at all unprecedented.

The Chinese market is positively tremendous in the PC space, hence various domestic developers creating F2P titles aimed exclusively at that region.

As there appear to be few others who will do so, I will recommend TAY to you—and not simply because I, personally, enjoyed every moment of playing it.

You have read the avalanche of comments stating that it is a largely copied and pasted version of FFIV. If you remember FFIV well, or played it recently, this will be

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The “Hyrule Warriors” max rupee glitch, which still works perfectly as of 1.6.1, and which I therefore abuse on a daily basis. (Should the timestamped link not work correctly, the successful glitch run begins at 3:00 on the dot.)

I understand that you’re to respond again later, so I’ll not go on for too long. (That’s probably a lie—I type entirely too fast to do anything besides writing too much.) However, I have mostly focused on the implied sexual interest to keep in line with your original post, which suggested getting laid. You had later

Though you state that you have not given an opinion, your terminology and the context it’s housed within can suggest an inclination. I would not say that’s solely on the reader, as I believe that would imply that you chose those words in error. You did intend to say “oblivious,” did you not? Would it not be rude of me

An addendum:

Since the OP was worried about people tripping over the cord, that’s not something that will be remedied by extension (though this is a positively wonderful description of how they can accomplish that). Besides the possibility of covering the cord with a rug—and, while you’re at it, buying an extension

I do think we’re disagreeing a bit. After all, in your last paragraph—where you say that it’s a matter of denial—I can’t agree. To call it obliviousness, too, seems dismissive, when we know that humans of either gender have—on a theoretically level playing field—effectively equivalent intellectual and emotional

Now that you’ve elaborated, I do understand the stereotype. I did date straight for a good number of years before understanding myself and settling into the life I have now, and have had for a little over fifteen years. It was more of an “in denial” thing. Even then, though, many of my friends were men—and we would

90% is virtually the whole hog. It’s only 10% shy, after all. I admit I didn’t understand the stereotype you mentioned, though. I am, however, both a woman and queer—and the vast majority of my friends are men. My significant other often worries what you do; I often have chats with her where I’m encouraging her not to

I personally feel that it’s best to believe that the average person doesn’t simply want sexual satisfaction. I wouldn’t say it’s naive; presuming that all men simply want sex is sexist toward them. Naive is thinking that it isn’t possible, but being fair is not considering it a definite until you have reason.

I don’t believe I’m the only one who doesn’t consider this “food for thought.” What she said was arrogant and inappropriate, bar none—and no, even at my angriest, I don’t say such things to people. This isn’t to imply that I’m a special snowflake, and a perfectly patient saint—I don’t mean that at all. However, I