thesquirrelgamer
TheSquirrelGamer
thesquirrelgamer

Me when I first saw this headline:

Ah, fair enough, I misunderstood. My apologies.

Let’s say for a moment that I could put my specific TV model number into Google and it would clearly give me, in the first few search results, a completely noob-friendly set of numbers for me to set things to. (Admittedly, I have not attempted this, but I highly doubt it’s that easy, because it’s never that easy.)

Except, like the article says, the “barely visible” guideline never seems to work. It’s ALWAYS too dark. 100% of the time. People are asserting that “well it would work if your TV were properly calibrated” and I’m saying my picture looks perfectly fine using out-of-the-box options up until this point.

And don’t anyone give me that “well clearly you haven’t calibrated your television corRECTly like I HAVE” snobbery. Not everyone is an A/V expert or can authoritatively determine whether it’s better to have the Contrast set to 57 instead of 58. Most of us just want something that doesn’t look like it looks like crap

yes
YES
THIS ENTIRE ARTICLE
GO
OFF

Don’t count it out

Fortnite is turning into the non-VR version of the game from Ready Player One.

Maybe it’s legal. Maybe it isn’t.

I believe the joke is that the author, Mike Fahey, is bald with a beard.

*flogs self for his grievous heresy*

Inclusive hairstyles LET’S GOOOOOOO

Shy Guy is in a blind bag?!

There’s one way out of it: testify in exchange for protection. That could invalidate a pre-nup and ensure her inheritance.

Is the voltage listed on the box or the included documentation? Hoping the voltage range is from 110-240 (and therefore is theoretically capable of moving to the UK with a different power cord).

Apropos of nothing, fuck xQc’s racist ass. Kotaku really shouldn’t be denigrating itself by seeking his opinion on anything.

I mean, for those criteria, they’d be better off heading out west to Dodge City and thereabouts. In Topeka, they’re just as likely to come back to their ship and find it’s been stripped for parts.

I call shenanigans.