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nopunin10did
the-assignment

Considering that nationalism was a root cause for two world wars, it’s honestly a scarier group to belong to. They want to redefine nationalism itself as being a positive ideology.

Possibly. It’s such a vastly different game, though.

Yes, but considering 480p is the only resolution the show is currently available in, and that’s unlikely to change, that’s a bit of a moot point.

“Twilight Imperium” is a completely different game with its own mechanics.

While the theming isn’t as solid as the original Dune, I can recommend “Rex” from Fantasy Flight (mentioned in the article). It’s a streamlined reskin of Dune into the Twilight Imperium universe, and it preserves (and arguably improves on) the original game mechanics.

I really just wish everyone would calm down. It’s completely understandable that customers would be very frustrated with an unfinished, buggy product. They have every right to voice that frustration, but I would suggest not using that forum to vent such frustration. Consistently elevating the heat and the rhetoric for

No, I think the problem is that you’ve grown used to interpreting “patriarchy” that way, but you haven’t actually been properly listening to the people who use the term.

That’s the standard Steam Link. 

Patriarchy doesn’t just mean “men.” It’s closer to “societal structures that treat men as superior to women.”

I just don’t know how long it will reliably be on Netflix. And that lacks quite a few special features. The current DVDs contain a wealth of cast and writer interviews.

I’d love that too, but I’m willing to accept it might be too costly. I should have said “I don’t need a remaster” in my first post.

It absolutely does. It’s currently only used for special features, as far as I’ve seen so far.

Because the current set is ~30 discs in size, and its DVD menus are awful. 

Honestly, I don’t want a remaster.

Related topic: have screen protectors actually gotten any better?

You deliberately left out an alternative definition that comes up as part of the top result in a Google search for “definition investment.”

The difference is that the score was written for the work, created for its unique context, while existing well-known pop music carries with it its own context.

See my comment regarding non-diagetic music.  I acknowledge that it might not “count” as an anachronism from the perspective of the characters and setting, but I do think it’s a bit off-tone with the rest of the film’s nostalgia.

I agree that non-diagetic music isn’t really a good basis for claiming anachronism normally. However, a movie that portrays itself as a period piece (as CM does) probably shouldn’t use anachronistic pop songs even in non-diagetic contexts.

I’m just assuming they didn’t get permission from a still-in-existence search company to show a circa-1995 interface. Not that they necessarily needed that permission, but probably didn’t want to ruffle any feathers (nor give any free advertising to a company unwilling to pay for that product placement).