totalimmortal85
Totalimmortal85
totalimmortal85

A normal player would have kept the card. Yes. It would be an investment to continue playing - or in the case of an friend of mine who pulled one, a $1000 cat, no seriously. A freaking cat! So yes, looking at it from a player who visits a GP once every 5 years, or an FNM tournament every couple months, the card is an

Actually when it first came out it wasn’t powerful in standard. The Modern format also didn’t exist as a format. At the time it was a $2-$5 rare. It didn’t become this mythical beast until things like fetch-lands rolled around and further boosted it’s power. If I had known then what I know now I would have saved them.

Kunihiko Tanaka

WAAAAAAA-OOOOOOOOH and don’t it feel good!

But has a sunny disposition.

Except through trial and error, or just paying attention, you could beat some of these games on a single quarter. Like Turtles in Time or Samurai Showdown/Mrotal Kombat. Also, you could buy the NES/SNES versions of the arcade games and practice. That way when you went to the Arcade you become a sort-of god where

Or knowing that holding B while running in Mario...

Yes, but his connections did give us this amazing soundtrack!

Now playing

And if I were a rich man, I’d bought Lucasarts myself and do just that! I also loved the Ewok films, when you go back and see them it astonishes me that Lucas ever turned away from practical effects. Low budget and campy as they were, the set design was still amazing.

Except that isn’t anything new with Star Wars though - in terms of home video releases. Yet think of how many board games, miniature games, action figures, books, RPGs, comics, cartoon shows, etc that have been around since the 90’s. Disney isn’t milking it, it’s already been milked. I’d say it’s just a tradition.

Point taken. I just don’t deal well with people dismissing things and calling other people incapable of understanding. So the hostility spawned from there. I’ll own that. Wasn’t conducive to any sort of conversation. Regardless of points of view.

You know, I’m gonna just repeal everything. I don’t know if you read the other post, and I’d delete it if I could. Regardless of how this turned out I will apologize for being rude several times. It wasn’t conducive to anything in the slightest.

Wrong

Wrong

Wrong

Wrong

Don’t away mad man. Just go away and peddle your bullshit elsewhere. If my hostility turns you off so be it. You can’t handle a discussion anyway, and your insults from the beginning are what caused the hostility. You’re to stupid to understand that. If you hadn’t insulted my intelligence and vaunted your own sense of

That’s your response? I never said I didn’t recognize the “bow” as the weapon of a hero, but you are basing your entire defense on my “lack of understanding” this. No, you’re still wrong and changing the topic is an example of how you keep grasping at straws to “prove your point.” Which you don’t have. The bow is

Nope. Peter was a genius level inventor and tinkerer in high-school/college. It’s one of the things that endeared the Amazing Spider-Man to me over the Sam Raimi nonsense and JMS used the idea later-one as well. I’m glad it went back to being an invention.

They weren’t thinking of it in terms of a sniper rifle or silent combat. It was a reliable rifle that could be mass-produced. The sniper-rifles were typically bolt action, like the Springfield. The “ping” wasn’t a defining noise in the middle of an urban firefight. It was also semi-automatic, which was a huge