tycho13
Tycho13
tycho13

Make it so you can’t heal in the blue zone. I think that’s fair enough.

An alternative I’ve discussed before, in regards to the blue zone, is maybe make it an instant death after a certain amount of time in addition to the same attrition rules. The amount of time before the instant death could be tied into the same rate at which the attrition damage increases.

The issue with PUBG (from a competitive or at the very least, cheese-free perspective) is that the blue zone doesn’t kill automatically. Camping outside the boundary is a bold move, but when done correctly it pays off bigly (it’s a word now, thanks to our shitty president, OK?). The obvious solution is to make the

I did guess this in the post: “Is that grid-thing used for some kind of aero drag tests? Perhaps the grid’s squares can be sealed with panels to increase drag as needed?”

Its not a defect, its a Feature!

Hellkitten indeed.

Purgatorycat

Good question! But chicken tax, as I understand it, is about manufacturing location, not corporate HQ.

Electric cars, yes. Teslas, no (unless you mean Nicola, but he wasn’t much for being ridden).

You sure it’s not a Lincoln?

New options on 2018 Porsches:

This was totally risky. Did you see him weaving traffic on the highway? What if someone over reacted to his weaving and caused another accident.

I should say I completely understand the impulse, but it feels like it’s in the same vein as instructing bank employees to let robbers take the money and get out without interfering.

I would think that chasing someone down would cause them to take more risks than if they weren’t being pursued. Unless you’re planning on shooting out their tires or ramming them off the road, what purpose does following them serve?

False, Colorado is the best.

My favorite business story is that the guy who created Grey Goose was just a marketing genius. He saw that Absolut was generally the top shelf vodka available and said “lets just make something 25% more expensive with a fancy frosted bottle.” And now we’re up to our asses in “premium” tasteless spirits.

Hot take incoming: Gin is like vodka in that 99% of people can’t tell the difference between expensive (good? maybe?) and cheap (bad? maybe?) and brand perception creates value.