These articles have really shown me how many “If this Pokemon does/doesn’t X, it will die” Pokedex entries there are and it’s kind of dark.
These articles have really shown me how many “If this Pokemon does/doesn’t X, it will die” Pokedex entries there are and it’s kind of dark.
As someone who started with BL3 and then went back and played the others, I really don’t get the hate for it. I think the criticisms people have of it are valid, but not as big of a deal as they’re made out to be. It was still fun.
Yeah, I’m not sure why these people think working 80 hours a week for their corporate overlords is some badge of honor the rest of us are supposed to be impressed by.
I guess if they want to, fine. But it sounds like they actually hate it and instead of wanting to improve the situation they’d rather everyone else just…
I remember my DS Lite making an uncomfortable clicking noise whenever I opened it so I always did so slowly. Each time I thought it would finally be the day the thing just snapped in half.
Those are obviously bigger issues. They’re also not what the article is about, so I didn’t bring them up. I brought up an example of similar online harassment because that’s the topic covered by the article. I can be concerned about all of the things you mentioned plus this thing.
Is your stance that this isn’t worth…
You’re alarmed that this situation of an actor being harassed for something a fictional character did reminded me of another situation where that exact thing happened? Yes, I’m concerned about people receiving harassment for things like this. It’s not a fictional example, these are real people receiving real harassment…
The inability of these people to clearly separate fiction from reality is alarming. It reminds me of Wyatt Russell being harassed over the actions of the fictional character he played in Falcon & Winter Soldier. What is their goal? Do they just want stories with no villains and no characters that ever do bad things?
It sort of reminds of the days when you could just outright buy a mobile game for a few bucks instead of “free” ones loaded with microtransactions. It was nice, my phone was full of games, but I wouldn’t buy a dedicated device for just that.
I really enjoyed your articles and you will be missed. And the way you constantly upset the weird straight white nerds by just talking about people who weren’t straight and white was just *chef’s kiss*
Thanks. I remember that article and think Levine was right too. Especially since the moral dilemma in Bioshock was “Would you kill this scared, crying child to level up your abilities?”. I liked the addition of the more interesting situations, like the one with Alexander, in Bioshock 2 where the effects were less…
In Bioshock, would a player who didn’t look it up beforehand know that you would get rewarded for doing the good thing later down the line? I remember just doing it anyway and the gifts for doing so came as a surprise. But it’s totally possible Tenenbaum mentioned it would happen at some point and I just forgot. I…
If you get the giant horse, you can actually ram into the guardians while riding it and tear the legs off. It’s fun and makes them pretty easy to beat.
While I didn’t like the way the Pokemon looked initially, once I saw them in motion in Detective Pikachu I actually though it worked really well. I’m concerned that a Netflix show might not get the budget to do that.
This. I’m not concerned for her entitled ass at all. I am, however, concerned for those around her.
Right? I knew what would happen and I did it anyway. I couldn’t even finish watching her conversation with the cop because I could feel that blood pressure spike coming.
I’ve seen this so many times, even with my own parents. Not only did they have nothing in common, but they tried to set rules about what the other could and could not do as far as hobbies were concerned. The only instances I can think of that being appropriate would be if they’re doing something dangerous or…
I did not know that about their total employee numbers, good to know. But by huge I just meant vast net worth, which they definitely have. You make a great point on the $600 a year, though. It’s really not that much, assuming anywhere hires him after this. Which makes the total amount even stranger. He’ll never…
A great point, thank you.
If I recall correctly, he didn’t have lawyers. He chose to represent himself.
Seriously, this feels extreme. Seeing a huge corporation just destroy some guy’s life feels like way too much, even if what he did was wrong. I definitely agree about a severe punishment for repeating the offense, but come on. They’re out for blood right away.