skycat
skycat
skycat

Any job is basically: listen to the ones with constructive criticism, ignore the trolls.

Article title should be beer batters fish, fez 2 fried

Honestly? If he can't take that sort of heat, he shouldn't be developing games in the first place.

I bet the "LEGALIZE IT" car would smoke the competition.

it's not cgi, for electron microscopes, they have to take hundreds of photos at different focal lengths to have a usable photo, the software does this for each frame in the video creating hundreds of interfocal and angle shots and compiles them togeather,

no cgi.. just computational software

Yeah but no one is looking forward to Chess 2 because it's not the same developer.

This is why when students whine about not getting taught the hot new language, CS people yell back that the fundamentals are more important. Regardless of how the system is implemented, someone is gonna need to know how to design it. And, having strong fundamentals makes it easier to pick up new

A full-blown Blood Dragon sequel. Give me $60 worth of Rex Powercolt, and I'll be very, very happy.

I really wish people would get this involved when black and brown children get slaughter and maimed by gang violence every second of every day in America's ghettos. But as Lupe Fiasco says, "yeah right".

Fuck all you "good liberal white people"

I find it interesting that this country only takes gun crime seriously, that is enough to warrant round-the-clock coverage, when there is either a white alleged perpetrator (Zimmerman), or a tragedy with most white victims (sandy hook). Nobody bats a fucking eyelash when black and brown kids get mowed down every by

The answer is always Bulbasaur

You're a shitty poster.

Since I work in the industry (albeit in the US), this is always a very interesting topic to me. It's something that gets discussed by the rank and file on set as well. I, and many others, think it would be a better world if there were more women directors. And I would agree that there is institutionalized sexism

The fez was developed to fashionable heights by Andalusian Arabs in the city of Fes, Morocco, by the 17th century. The artisans involved in their making were the most selective members of the city's souqs.

My friend's company Cubeworks has been doing this kind of art for years and were one of the innovators of the rubik's cube art genre. Check them out, they already broke the world record twice for the amount of rubik's cubes used.