wetbuttsdrivemenuts--disqus
WetButtsDriveMeNuts
wetbuttsdrivemenuts--disqus

It's looks like an old school cover-free shooter, but with some new mechanics tossed in. That's interesting.

I think this is just a little area to show off the new guns, the vertical mechanics and the monsters. No idea how the real game will play, but for once we got actual gameplay and not a pre-rendered video of grim men talking about war.

"RAGE was a pile of shit…"

I feel like this will be a more appreciable jump. Back in that era, the fighting systems were still turn-based too, right?

I feel like the best way to sell a FFVII remake to make is to release FFXV with an incredible, revolutionary fighting system, and say, "FFVII will work on this system."

Tomb Raider and Deus Ex Human Revolution were both fantastic. And they're getting sequels.

I noticed in the Witcher, I'm leveling fast enough to more-or-less match the pace of the main story, and the side quests are crazy-fun enough that I don't care I'm overleveling for the main story.

Guh, jocks are the worst amirite?

I purposefully didn't use the overhead turn-based combat in Dragon Age recently because it was infinitely easier to just run up and spam attack.

I liked how it created a believable reality. I loved talking to little girls about their cat or old men about the history of this tiny Japanese town.

Fishing in that game demonstrates how much more patience for this garbage I had before I developed taste.

And after the tragedy with Myrcella, who knows if Jaime's will be either.

Also, they might not care. A chance at life is better than being a broodmare and a broken slave until their inevitable and horrible deaths.

Lakes are for the weak. If thirsty, bite off a lizard's head and drink what's in there.

Real life Omar survived a taller drop and walked away, too.

I adore the show, but I do find the "oh wait, they're actually alive" plotpoints to be insufferable (freddie Lounds in particular). Also, the Dr. Gideon has been great in this one episode, but the constant bringing him back last season was a bit much.

They built plotpoints out of the changes though, which is cool. ShowWill is way more unstable, and so his relationship with the police feels way more predatory. In the books, you're just kind of like, "eh, if he wasn't here he'd just be fishing anyway, probably"

He's so much fun on twitter.

The blow is so artful, and serves as a reminder that Hannibal's violence is rarely on-screen, and is usually in our mind. Actually, we usually just see the aftermath of the incident, and the build-up through Will Graham's visions.

Spoilers: