tmsmilner
Smilner
tmsmilner

If she does, then she will. It is a excellent group game. If you have a good enough connection that you can Share View, I'm sure a number of Gameologorinos would be happy to watch you play, as well. But I've never known someone to be able to get that to work.

Today's a fairly rare occasion - you'll find that by and large both games have pretty universal acclaim. I love them both dearly - between the two, I'd say that me and my wife have probably sunk in well over 600 hours.

Yeah, it seems that they guy was really boorish about his request for a missing sword poster, and the scribe took it upon himself to teach the guy a lesson. True Neutrality is the BEST.

HARNESS

Until Dawn is excellent. I recommend inviting 3 or 4 friends over on a Saturday night, and all playing it together with the lights out and a few bottles around you, with you taking point for the purposes of QTEs.

I don't understand this game's priorities, but you can bet your ass I'll be there.

The Choco What Now?

That's a fair point of view on the game, but personally I found the Winter's Palace was the first New Thing to come along in a large scale RPG in a really long time, and I found the whole thing kind of thrilling.

That's a reasonable thing to hope for in a game, but I understand completely why the game didn't deliver on that hope. Ultimately, the creator of the game made it to express and grieve for his own experience, and the perspective of him and his wife on faith's role in it. I think of it less as someone inserting

Boy oh boy, HackMaster!

Nope. He's getting them. The key to nuclear retaliation is operating with speed. The President's identity must be confirmed by the Secretary of Defense, but nobody has veto power on the President's decision for nuclear strike.

I get that. I really do. But I've come to terms with the fact that I'd rather take a total shitheel who will try to twist the laws to his own ends, rather than someone with no regard or respect for any law, more, or norm. It's almost impossible to fight someone who operates so far outside the lines.

Is that an actual line? I'm getting deja vu. I'm sure I own that.

Still saying that I had wanted Gen. Patraeus, which is what we've come to.

She said it was totally a typo.

That must be close to where I got. It's been really long.

Iron Man 3 rules.

I was nearly as enthusiastic about the instruction booklets as I was about the games. It is one of the greatest parts of older games. I got Final Fantasy XV last month, and the lack of any kind of instruction manual had me more upset than any of the game's pacing issues.

I don't even know. It was nigh on 30 years ago, and the best I remember is that you have to play it virtually perfect, since armor is rare, armor can only take one hit, and then your soft fleshy body can then only take one hit. No Konami Code, no nothing.