I think this is absolutely PERFECT. The first season literally has has the evil corporation lying to the poor souls stuck in its system, and the only way out is for them to unite against the tyranny, so yeah. This is appropriate.
I think this is absolutely PERFECT. The first season literally has has the evil corporation lying to the poor souls stuck in its system, and the only way out is for them to unite against the tyranny, so yeah. This is appropriate.
If this is how Andor ends, it feels like an appropriate ending to the series.
So be it. Stand with labour not with corporations.
So for $500 a night you think you can get a roof over your head at a decent hotel, let alone all your meals comped AND a full-immersive theatrical experience all at the same time? Wow.
As a hotel, it would never work. It’s not built for that, period.
There are plenty of resorts that are out of reach for 99% or more of the population, and they do just fine. The problem is that not very many of that 1% (or whatever) are interested in a Star Wars resort.
More like you don’t understand what the Nona facility was for. Maybe google a bit, it has nothing to do with tourism.
Good for him. I’m bummed about delays it might cause to Andor, but it needed to be done.
I’m confused as to why Amir messaging from his bedroom is an issue. Would his words be more credible if they were sent from his office?
Is it wrong that I’m interested purely because of how fucked up it is?
A burning vehicle with 20 gallons of gasoline in the passenger compartment is evidence of safety? OK.
Listen buddy, I saw a copy of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney on the shelf at a game shop years ago. I didn’t buy it but let me tell you, looking at the cover picture taught me a lot about the legals and the briefs, so I think I’m qualified to say that this is a clear-cut win for the claim-man against the bad-team, for a…
Seriously. Based on the top image, I was ready to write this off completely just because of how generic the character design was.
Now that’s a really good question, and one I’ve been wondering about. Speculation was that Sony gave CDPR the benefit of the doubt that they would get the bugs fixed in time for release.
The well-researched fact that working more hours for long periods tends to lead to lower productivity due to work errors provides at least a general way to extrapolate that crunch could have contributed to some of the glitches and bugs.
Tell us again how crunch makes everything better, gang.
Thank you! Universal systems give me the heebies because I like the warm embrace of a packaged genre. But Dream Factory feels like a great way to let story lead the game, instead of coming up with stats for everything in existence.