trjh2k2
TBone
trjh2k2

I read the article... then read the comments... and it baffles me how many people are coming to the defense of those who make death threats over entertainment.

I did read their definition, and I still think their arbitrary use of made up terms doesn't help anyone. If this one point is made up of some magical mix of other statistics, they should have just listed those stats on their own instead. THAT information would have been valuable. Give me a chart showing the increase

A lot of meaningless things are important to a lot of people. That doesn't defeat my point that using "organic" as a musical term is vague, immeasurable, and subjective- meaning it's useless as a data point-

Dancibility? Organicness? Bounciness? I can understand tracking the use of certain instruments, use of compression, tempo, etc., but a lot of this "data" is really meaningless.

I feel like the booth, this article, the comments, people's attitudes, etc. are all evidence that we've made much less "progress" in the areas of diversity and tolerance than we give ourselves credit for.

Silly internet commenters, forgetting how the world works. YouTube isn't going to miraculously get overtaken by another company, or change their policies because a handful of gamers are mad at them for taking down content. And they aren't suddenly evil and out to get everyone for no reason. I get that not all of

content creators are in the legal right here.

Why are you on a site named kotaku if you dislike anime?

Those that despise anime truly do not see anime for what it is, and have closed their minds to something that they have not even fully tried to understand.

Not everyone can code. Absolutely not. A lot of people can code- but not everyone. And nobody is convinced that any of these people are any more computer literate than my dog.

I think a lot of what we're interpreting as a "diluting" effect comes from what people's image of their distribution systems are. Like we see steam as a sort of curated shop- expecting at least a certain level of quality or status in order to have been allowed on that platform. You can open the steam store page and

Anodyne, TRAUMA, and I think Machinarium. There's others but I forget.

Arguably, all of gaming is getting "diluted", but there's always been tons of indie games. I think it would be more fair to say that Steam is getting more diluted, for better or worse.

It's not inaccurate to say we don't have many guns. At least relatively speaking, we barely have any guns- and even those that do often don't keep them within easy access. Regardless of ownership, the likelihood that the average person would either carry a gun in public of have one within easy reach at home is low

WTF customer we did you a favor!

I don't understand why people stop reading an article as soon as they become offended by something in it. You risk missing important parts of the message that you came here to read in the first place. If anything, an article should be more interesting if something in it is potentially offensive.

Games may not need pink and dresses and bows to identify women necessarily, but they do need to adhere to some sort of design language or patterns so that the end user interprets the piece as intended.

Her videos are all informed facts about games.