thisnameisanalias
ThisNameIsAnAlias
thisnameisanalias

There is also the issue of a vehicle being probably the single worst vehicle to use if Stealth is your top priority. So what, he just parks it in an alley and expects homeless people not to shit on it? Or for police (who are technically hunting Batman) to just sit there and wait for him to come pick up his fly ride

Video games and movies are very different. I spent several years on both sides of the fence in game design (publisher and developer, ended with THQ bankruptcy. Vowed never to go back to the wildly exploitative industry). You are simply naive to how game development works. It is ok to admit. Publishers put the money up

Says the guy who's never worked a day in the industry.

Nope. Publisher hire developers because they have people with the skills to make the game, not necessarily for their vision. Think of it this way, construction contractors hire masons and other tradesmen to build a building. The tradesman gets little or no say in the building being built, that is the contractor's

Cool for you. Oh, am I supposed to care what random internet douche thinks? Sorry, I just ran out of fucks to give.

Nope. All the DMCs are the same in that regard. The game is garbage. Which sucks, because I wanted it to be good soooooo badly, but it just isn't. I may be being a bit unfair, the game isn't terribad, it is just mediocre, which I think personally is worse than being bad.

Again, published by capcom, a Japanese company. I don't know how well you know the relationship between Publisher and Developer, but what the publisher says goes unless your studio is one of the one in a million that produced a super smash hit. Ninja Theory is not one of those developers.

Dude, literally every single level began with you being sucked into purgatory. The game is bad. Don't worry, just because you like it doesn't mean you are bad. Just that you happen to like a bad game. Stop investing so much of your identity into a piece of entertainment. The level design was trite and involved moving

Produced by Capcom.

Your closing statements are erroneous. The game was not incredible, the art style and gameplay was not very "inspired" and was insanely repetitive. (Oh noes! We're being sucked into Purgatory.... AGAIN! This was the beginning of every... single... mission.) No physics what so ever (Hey japan, 1998 called and wants its

So better to err on the side of caution and lock everyone up, right? I mean, if they are innocent, let the courts decide that. Right? That doesn't sound like freedom to me, it sounds very fascist to me.

Many years ago I thought about something like this. only instead of live actions scenes, basically the people get VR helmets (at the time there was no occulus rift, but that would probably be the best product to use). The rooms are populated with basic furniture that is replicated in the VR headset. The furniture

The batmobile was one "gadget" I never understood why batman had. Restricting your movements to city streets in a high tech, highly visible, and highly corner-able vehicle seems to be the opposite of what the league of shadow trained him to do. What is to stop the army from just sitting and waiting for the batmobile

This is one of the catches with the rule about using median income. My general rule of thumb is to give yourself a 15% quality of life upgrade if you are moving for a job. Meaning you calculate whatever pay is equivalent to your current quality of life (so $45,000 in Ohio == $85,000 in San Francisco). Not to mention

I adhered to this rule and just made a career move that doubled my pay, 100% paid by company insurance plan, and 1% ownership of the company. Plus other incentives like they provide breakfast lunch and dinner. Not that the recruiter was hounding me for it, but they did ask what my current pay was. I side stepped this

How very... Monty Python of them.

Never reveal your salary. You may never get in with the big dogs at first, but you will eventually and you won't be hamstringing yourself along the way. To reveal your salary is to give a future employer the advantage in compensation negotiations. Once you have the contacts and work history under your belt, the

I also was one of the apparent many who were going to mention SW: SotE. What is funny is that codes like that are not allowed to be in games anymore. Part of Sony, MS, and Nintendo requirements for releasing a game on their system is to allow the user no access to debugging tools. Which is totally balls in my opinion.

Is it me, or does Drax look suspiciously close in design to Kratos? Complete with rage issues.

Video game QA is lucky to make half of that amount... they must be counting QA director and QA VP pay in there, which skews the number up tremendously.