wescreamforstarscream
Starscream, M.D.
wescreamforstarscream

I loved the elevators. Sure, they got old, but at least the conversations were a Hell of a lot more amusing than staring at "Now Loading" for just as long, and was a lot less immersion breaking since at least the uber-slow elevators were in-universe, not "bathroom break time"

I thought it was the strongest episode this series, so far. I would rather be assailed with ideas than watch action sequences frustrated by budget constraints, which I've seen a bit of in the other episodes. Like the Paternoster St gang's awkward fight sequence in the restaurant basement, or the spectacle last week of

Except that, for the last 30 years or so in the comics, Superman doesn't have a "no-kill rule." He generally doesn't kill criminals because (1) the vast majority of criminals can't hurt him, so he can't justifiably kill them in self-defense, and (2) if he began serving as judge, jury, and executioner for criminals

CNN won't care unless Many A True Nerd is a member of the NRA.

somebody's grouchy.

I feel that the first Mass Effect is still the best one in the series, even if its controls feel a bit weird.

Yeah, I can understand that. The first Dragon Age was incredible, and I really enjoyed the expansion pack as well. I didn't hate DAII nearly as much as everyone else, though it was clearly a rush job, and just shameful when placed beside the Witcher II - arguably DA's greatest franchise rival.

It's there, but it's hard to find because the level design in the swamp is obnoxious.

It's hard for me to look at Dragon Age 2 and get super, super excited, because... well, it let me down so hard. It felt like a completely different team made it, y'know?

Geralt is the fantasy equivalent to Clint Eastwood's the Man With No Name. He is not emotionless or uncaring, but he is distant, inexpressive, gruff and sarcastic. He expresses himself through his actions, rather than the tone of his voice. As someone who loves the Dollars-trilogy I instantly recognised the archetype

Yeah, say what they want... GoldenEye is a great movie. It's amazing how many feel-good, beat-up-the-bad guys and get revenge moments there are, while Brosnan's Bond stays sophisticated, cool and in control the whole time.

"...was born of a movie that was not James Bond's finest outing. "

The Witcher really was something special. I remember trying it once, something like six years ago, and having to resign myself to the fact that my laptop couldn't handle it. Even so, despite the terrible graphics, and my computer's atrocious performance, I remember being immersed like I hadn't been in a game since my

Sure, Brosnan wasn't the best Bond, but IMO Goldeneye was the best Bond movie during Brosnan's time as Bond. Definitely one of my favorite Bond movies.

I just would rather personally have the game in my own language, I do not like reading subtitles, but that would be better than this.

I agree. Sailing was the best. I don't think I could handle another full game of it, though. Unless it was just sailing, better done, and none of that faux-assassination crap.

Obviously not but it doesn't feel so much like Paris when everyone speaks English with an American accent.

Don't be lazy. Get your ass on the swivel gun. You're also in charge sea shanties.

Well I gotta say my hat is off to Ubisoft. They really nailed the French accent!

I love my Vita. I continuously look at the store and am amazed by how many games I need to play and buy. Games that vary from £5 to £30. The bigger memory card sitch isn't so much an issue for me, because while a bigger one would be nice, I like the idea of only deleting games from the system once they have been fully