sketchygio
sketchygio
sketchygio

You know, in life and on the internet there’s also room for moderate opinions that don’t require extremism.

I beg to differ. We have already seen the likes of professional with poor choice of words:

Apologies for being pedantic, but you managed to follow up a confusing comment with a somehow more confusing essay.

If animators are capable of pulling off a union, I’m certain game devs can as well.

Now playing

You reminded me of this Last Week Tonight segment:

Won’t deny, I’ve found myself enjoying WWE over things like MMA, even though I don’t typically watch either!

This is my kind of trash talk, if it barely qualifies as such. Even though it’s hardly trashing the opponent before the actual match, the whole speech exudes personality and character without being reminiscent of a real life dick.

Doing a good deed isn’t supposed to always pay off. But it doesn’t make it wrong to keep trying every time regardless. Same thing goes for being nice, which is somehow much harder to do than to just always being shitty or not giving a shit at all (which sadly comes so naturally to most of us in this day and age). You

Ugh damnit, Bubbles. I love his AGDQ runs and commentary, too. I wish they’d given him a temporary ban given it’s his first offense and that he seems to be (at least in part) sorry and understanding of his mistake. But it is a pretty bad offense to make.

I appreciated the feature that lets you look at people’s old Steam screennames. Some people love changing it every month and I can’t keep track of who is who. But most importantly, my wife pinpointed a guy we used to play Dota with who briefly changed his name to something preeeetty racist, before changing it to

Thank you! I was looking for someone to speak up for my favorite Brit.

Hey now, I resent that. I’m an older brother. I’ve watched my little bro play through all of NieR (the original). And I enjoyed it, and have very fond memories of the game. Also never felt the need to play it myself after the fact. We shared a room and consoles for our entire adolescent lives, so we would switch off

I’m not even sure the issue is nerve, so much as emotional and reality detachment. I imagine that the people who pull these stunts either don’t understand that the person on their computer screen is an actual human being with emotions and needs, or they are just psychopaths incapable of feeling. Hope they catch the

That was such a confusing and ambiguous review of a game. I’m unsure if I I know any more or any less than I did before watching this video.

Attending this is going on my bucket list.

Honestly, I’ve been wanting to play this game for a while but both what you describe and the necessary grinding for additional characters is what keeps holding me at bay from purchasing the dang thing.

Ohh man, this brings me back... I used to intern at Black20. Rip my dudes!

You know, after years of rewatching this film, I think I can say that I actually unironically like it. I remember feeling intense dissapointment as a kid. Yeah, it’s weird and not exactly in tune with the actual Mario universe but... the more I inexplicably watched it as I grew older, the more I would catch loving

Always prudent to do so. Did the same with No Man’s Sky. Ironically though, it turns out I loved that game.

Eh, both ways have their pros and cons. Over there, you’re basically programmed to do your work, do it well and never rock the boat. In the US, we may be vocal, but we’re very pro active when it comes to saving time, energy or money (‘work smarter, not harder’ is a common saying in my profession). Having lived abroad,