Because of the reality of how much absurd time would go into a single individual actually catching/breeding the team they want to use.
Because of the reality of how much absurd time would go into a single individual actually catching/breeding the team they want to use.
a cheap attempt at generating rage bait clicks
The claim was that Star Trek was “taking risks, like a goofy adult animated comedy or a kid’s show”.
Weirdly, licorice.
I was going to say much the same.
“I will inhale treacle until I am dead! Hooray!”
Some of what modern Trek has done is taking risks, like a goofy adult animated comedy or a kid’s show
“Mom, I’m a criminal,” the first Reddit user said about finding themselves suddenly overwhelmed with cash. No, you’re an entrepreneur.
If you had told me back in 2007 that Team Fortress 2 would outlive every competing class-based shooter for the next sixteen years...
I’m still don’t quite understand why they powered the rover with nuclear, but the helicopter with solar.
“Infinite content means infinite profits!” - Techbros
Star Trek? Taking risks? Uhhh...
Well, I have bad news for you - the party you hate more is going to win, because the other guy signed a contract saying he wouldn’t do a thing, and then he did the thing, and thus broke the legally binding agreement he made.
Tough, but fair!
I continue to be irritated that people signing contracts without reading them is a thing. It’s becoming increasingly common in contracts of all kinds. Seems like basic common sense ought to apply?
Honestly, the most scandalous aspect of any of this is Lobe claiming to be “the creator of the deathclaw” and the article glibly accepting that as true.
So should I assume that you live out in the boondocks somewhere, and have never had any experience with truly large crowds of people?
I mean, yes, but did that result in charges of “incitement to riot”, and more importantly, did those charge make it to court and past a jury?
Well, yeah - why do you think the police use agent provocateurs?
It has nothing to do with New York, it’s been broad / vague for hundreds of years - it comes from English common law.