There is only one ending to ME3: destroy. Nothing else remotely fits thematically. Hell, you even use a gun to shoot the crucible and shooting things to solve problems is literally 90% of what one does in Mass Effect.
There is only one ending to ME3: destroy. Nothing else remotely fits thematically. Hell, you even use a gun to shoot the crucible and shooting things to solve problems is literally 90% of what one does in Mass Effect.
Having spent a fair bit of time around doctors in a recreational setting, while names are by practice omitted, there is nothing they love more than one-upping each other with stories of weird patients. Either the conditions they have or simply their behavior.
Yeah...And given the story it didn’t bother me. It made sense in universe. What I didn’t like was the “oh hey, turns out we did make contact with the Milky Way and they might all be dead due to some ‘reaper’ thing.” got entirely brushed under the rug.
Pretty sure the Quarians show up in the first DLC. Not sure if you beat the story yet, but they made it pretty obvious.
Nah. You just need to break up content from transit from retail. The people who lay down the cable shouldn’t be the ones selling plans to individuals. The people selling cable packages shouldn’t own the channels they’re selling.
Whatever role they had for Worf, it’s still better than Geordi’s original role, which was a bad joke that wouldn’t end.
Anyone in the middle of the Antarctic seas is out of surface based communication and satellite service can be sporadic (most don’t use polar orbits so they don’t rise above the horizon that far south).
Yes. FYI, the cannanite god’s name is usually rendered in English as “Moloch”. Which, yes, is pretty much identical to “Molok”.
The term you’re looking for is “strong AI”, which is Star Wars style droids with a general intelligence.
And only if you use top shelf routers and MIMO and channel bonding. Yes, I know. The point is it’s a decade old and is far, far faster than what the OP was claiming.
AT&T doesn’t need you to play devil’s advocate. They can afford, and already do, have Satan on retainer.
Your sources are very, very out of date. 802.11n, which has been around for about 10 years, supports speeds up to 500Mbps. Wireless-ac can actually hit gigabit speeds.
Indeed. Someone, somewhere is still bitching about the end of Mass Effect 3.
There are better alternatives...in theory at least. That’s why LRLAP was canceled. The Navy is going to go back to the drawing board and buy something that has less capability but is far cheaper.
And you responded to my “smart” statement with a dumb comment. Nobody - ever - intended to pack these things with a thousand shells at nearly a million each. You knew this, because that cost (and subsequent cancelation) is why we’re talking about this in the first place.
Um...none, because the 800k shell was canceled.
The Zumwalt is literally built around its powerplant and electrical generators. The guns are built around the 155mm NATO shell, and there is more than one way to build a guidance system into that weapon.
And the largest bombing campaigns in history (by tonnage dropped) couldn’t alter the Vietnam war. Both are excellent examples of why the DoD doesn’t like buying unguided weapons any more.
Right, which is why this program was canceled. The Army has a similar, though less capable, system called Excalibur which aside from having a better name also runs about $10K a pop. The Navy should swallow its pride and buy a couple thousand until it can figure its own shit out.
You wouldn’t invade the Chinese mainland. You’d be landing on Taiwan (or some other island) to liberate it from a mainland invasion.