type2red
type2RED
type2red

Please remember that the employees are just trying to put food in their mouths, they’re not the bad guys. I worked at Gamestop for a long time and got out right before this nonsense started. The pressure can be intense.

It really is a terrible program that punishes employees for selling customers what they actually want. Thankfully, the GameStop I work at is filled with mostly good folks who are always looking out for our customers. The side effect is that we constantly have to fudge our numbers so we don’t get chewed out for low

As one of the unfortunate Gamestop employess, my first reaction is ‘love my job, hate the company. Been working for the company since 2005 and the circle of life is the biggest crock of shit ive ever dealt with. My district Manager, sorry Leader (were not supposed to use the words Manager or customer any more) has

Worked for Gamestop for 3 years as a store manager. I was fired for paying my employees out of pocket to help me out off the clock because corporate pulled all my hours during Christmas time so I was soloing a fucking store by myself. I doubt none of this.

Gamestop: For people who haven’t learned about amazon.com

Having worked at Gamestop for a short time, I am in no way surprised by any of this. Thanks for the heads up. I’ll never shop there again.

I know there is a lot more to it than using my analogy. Some of my best friends are not from this country and I’ve lived in other countries myself. I know what an amazing country we have. Regardless we need a much better vetting process than what Obama had in place. I’d rather we sort it out in the beginning than let

Read it again....

I’ve heard on many occasions being a good leader is doing what’s right even if it’s not “popular” or “cool.” We are a nation of immigrants however times have changed and we can’t be ignorant about the world, the good and bad. Would you let a complete stranger come live with you and your family? I know I wouldn’t -

I remember playing double dragon as kid and literally every beat’em up after it felt a million times better to play. I will not be forcing myself to re-experience the frustration of NES era double dragon games. 

My standards are low because I played FFXI. Nothing like having to walk for an hour to get something done.

Well, you know, the entire main story quest of FFXIV.

I guess I’m just masochistic, but I’ve always liked that DQ games make it tough to revive your characters. In most JRPGs, revival is fairly trivial outside of battle, using an item that’s expensive at first and trivial by the halfway point, but in DQ, you need to be CAREFUL. And if someone dies during a boss fight,

Bloodborne the first time I played. It took me almost three hours, and an insane amount of deaths, to realize you were supposed to pick up a weapon before fighting the very first enemy wolf thing. It took me months to get over how pissed I was and go back. I simply thought that was the insane difficulty everyone was

Why would you subject yourself to that?

That is nothing, I can speed run every Resident Evil film in like 5 mins.

Worked for NoA during the gamecube days. Can confirm none of this will happen. We used to have a saying at NoA..

5) A Netflix-style subscription package: This is an easy winner. Charge people a monthly $15-20 subscription for unlimited access to hundreds of NES, SNES, N64, and GameCube games. The games automatically lock whenever your subscription ends. Just a win-win.

Played the first one. Combats weird, missions are sometimes aggravating, boss fights can be aggravating as fuck, but I never felt more like a super hero in a video game than when I played Gravity Rush. Definitely had a Ms. Marvel feel where at first your new powers are awkward and get you into precarious situations,

Hmmmm, that is a very mixed review.