shagishagster
Shagittarius
shagishagster

“I think services like iTunes, and Steam have changed our perceptions of what music/movie/game collections can be,” he said. “What people don’t realize is that one day these services will go out. What will we have left then?

How about “Epilogue simulator,” because all of these games take place *after* the story has happened and everybody’s gone?

All I see is a beast, a contract, and a trophy to hang off the side of my horse.

That sounds really odd. I’ve been using nvidia since TNT2 with zero issues. The one time I tried a Radeon, I got nothing but glitchy artifacts and crashes.

Kinect does a few things right, some more wrong, and all of it’s infuriating.

The Kinect killed the Kinect. It just isn’t any good.

She got off easy.

Candy Crush is a critical part of Windows 10’s Kernel

Someone here said in a meeting once, “Scheduling is a completely futile task, but we have to do our best job to get it right.” And I think that about sums up my views on it. It’s futile but essential. In the end, it’s done when it’s done. In the doc you’re seeing a lot of people worried about hitting those milestones

Just got this game for PC and have my settings maxed-ish with pretty decent framerates. Spent time just walking around the city just to take in the sights. Such a well designed city imo.

Alright, alright, alright.

Airplane references will always win.

Is this an ironic White Knight comment?

Now playing

I call bullshit! It was Alone in the Dark and Capcom knows it. They can deny it all they want but they are lying to you and themselves.

I can't see how a 40-hour training class where officers are forced to use Kinect doesn't result in random citizens being beaten with sticks.

What if the camera is in the helmet?

Yeah dude. Books and movies are bad at story ownership. Totally NOT powerful. Videogames are better because they're mechanical! What am I gonna do to a book? Turn a bunch of more pages? What can I do to a movie? Like maybe pause it or whatever. Lame. Videogames, though: Mad possibilites, yo. Push Y to look. Push X to

Now playing

It's great to see quite a few of the classic LucasArts and Sierra adventure games on this list. Loom was quite a fun little game when I was kid and it helped further my enjoyment of classical music. The soundtrack is all arrangements of public domains classical compositions.

Loom was one of the first games I played through as a kid. I loved it.

The game is available on Steam, although I believe it is the CD-ROM version, which was heavily edited (read: shortened) to support the spoken dialogue. The diskette based versions had much more dialogue options and a few extra scenes. Either way thought, it is well worth playing!