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Isn't that basically the same criticism the reviewer had about the jokes?

For book readers (at least this book reader), Hodor's death scene had the same effect.

"Ozymandias" made me realize that commercial breaks were actually beneficial. After an incredibly tense scene in the house when Walt, Jr. stands up to Walt, Walt took Holly and Skyler ran out to the street and screamed for him. I needed an emotional break after that.

I've heard that, but I also heard that wasn't true. I made it through without getting one, but could have easily missed a mimic.

I didn't know this until NG++ when I got frustrated at never getting the Symbol of Avarice and had to look up how to get one. I threw 20 charms at one mimic before it finally dropped.

I'm only level 8, but just wondering if they match players in Quickplay mode by level. At this point, I feel like I'm barely catching on to what I'm supposed to be doing with each class, and I'm wondering if I've pissed off some level 20 player with some stupid decision at any point. I know you can see levels in game,

I took Dark Souls 3's mimics to be just another enemy. I don't think I ever fell for one, but the effect of that is that I always attack every chest before I open it. They're still relatively tough enemies, so even though they fail as mimics, I didn't find them to have a negative impact on gameplay. That mimic in

Thought it was pretty late. Not sure how much this had to do with the excellence of season 2, but I think dragging out the main villain stories hurt both The Flash and Arrow this season. Moreso The Flash, though. At least Neil McDonough was a good villain. Teddy Sears just wasn't believable as menacing.

Your points about Laurel are well made. Shouldn't they at least have known who was in the grave at the beginning of the season? For that matter, shouldn't they at least have a basic plot thread for the entire season before they begin? I don't know much about serialized TV show plotting, but is it a common practice to

I agree that the magic element gave the show an excuse to just throw in weird plot points for no reason, but McDonough was pretty great as a villain.

Nice! Now every episode of The Flash and Arrow, we can all say, "Why didn't they just call Supergirl to fix it up?"

They can probably write around this by saying Stein will return almost the instant he left, so she'll never notice he was gone. Of course, if he dies, that might be harder to explain.

I couldn't believe this was an episode of Legends of Tomorrow while I was watching. Character motivations made sense; the plot kept moving forward; it was funny. I kind of rolled my eyes last week because I figured Jax's awesome car-fixing skills would somehow translate into fixing up a time ship, but his recruiting

I don't take it as Tommen's forces "can't" storm the Sparrow's forces, rather that he doesn't want to. Tommen's been set up as a person who would rather come to a peaceable solution instead of immediately resorting to violence. Plus, the Sparrow's got the support of the people. Taking him down by force wouldn't be the

Especially in the land of the Dothraki, where the standard of living is probably 25 years before you get your throat slit at a wedding or your tongue ripped out by a rival.

Yeah, especially immediately after raising someone from the dead. She's a woman whose faith was shaken, and Jon coming back to life raised her spirits significantly, as it should have. I thought that was a weird criticism, too.

You'd trade The Flash before Legends? Sure, The Flash has been abysmal this year, but I can see a better future for it than Legends, especially a Sarah Lance-less Legends.

Would it make any sense to just keep it on CBS, but make a 10-13 episode season? Serialized shows almost always work better with shorter seasons (Breaking Bad, The Wire, Game of Thrones - not to suggest Supergirl could ever be on par with one of these), and Supergirl would be no exception (same with Arrow and The Flas)

What lie? Diggle said Andy tried to take the gun but I just figured I missed that. Did he lie about that so he wouldn't seem like a cold-blooded killer?

So the dome is the "restart" part of the Genesis. Thea obviously chosen by Malcolm to survive the nuclear blast. It's cool that she'll have a different objective from the rest of the team for at least an episode. It'll be nice to see her working on her own.