To be fair, Angel had to sacrifice Holland Manners because he loved Fonzie.
To be fair, Angel had to sacrifice Holland Manners because he loved Fonzie.
...and offer the choice to upgrade old editions. This one does not.
Just want to mention:
I think a GameStop near where I used to live — 96th Street in Fishers, Ind., if curious — still has the $5 deposit I threw down on Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time back in 200...2? 3?...to get the pre-order bonus disc they were offering.
But then we never would have gotten the talking raptor on the plane in Jurassic Park 3.
Separate point: I really disliked Immortals on Switch :/
I’m just not sure where all this ire is coming from. The Nintendo eShop has long been the home to bundles of base game and DLC that have been $70 or more. There’s an Atelier bundle weighing in at $115, while Ubi has an edition of Immortals Fenyx Rising — which is actually a good game, strongly recommended — for $100.
I had the same thought, and I’ve never actually played the game despite it being my one Stadia purchase.
They’re apparently meeting whatever Bethesda/Microsoft sees as sales targets as the game is still being sold at full-price (or near it) physically and digitally. If sales were bad, if retailers and/or Bethesda were unhappy, the trigger on a permanent price cut would’ve been pulled.
Already pre-ordered the Sunsoft book, and will likely order this one once orders open up. Oh, OK...and SNES and Virtual Boy Works books, too.
I can see the Stadia tech becoming the Zoom to Parsec’s Teams.
And everyone in this movie is now just One Degree from Sosie Bacon.
Hey, now...Lou Ferrigno and Arnold Schwarzenegger managed to survive the role OK as decent people.
...or candy.
And the same to you!
I think you’re right according to the strict letter of the hypothetical law of the English language. However, “new” has an understood secondary meaning of “older things in a different scene/venue/home.”
It’s incredible how quickly technology has progressed in just this short time.
The first time I heard of this technology was when a company offered to create an artificial voice for Roger Ebert after he lost the ability to speak due to cancer surgery. The process was made easier by the numerous high-quality recordings he made as audio commentaries for various movies.
Considering the franchise’s history of announcing a new Cloverfield movie was on the way only well after the movie had already been shot — two months before release for 10 Cloverfield Lane/Valencia, and two months before the original release date for Paradox/God Particle — yeah, I think the headline is right to react…
Damn, damn, DAMN!