wfrose
WFROSE
wfrose

I like that law!

I work with a transman, the most disconcerting thing is when he started working where I do, and he would stand outside the bathrooms, almost every time, before resigning himself and going into the women’s room. He’s been told several times by people with more executive power at our job that he can use the men’s room,

well, apparently we’ve skipped straight to the ad-hominem attacks, since explaining your position seems to be beyond your capacity...

What if the person next to you in a stall has some gastrointestinal issues? I know I would care ;p

Really? Really guy? If he doesn’t feel comfortable using a gender-neutral bathroom, it’s his preference. We shouldn’t be rallying against anyone about their bathroom preferences, whether trans-gendered or cis-gendered.

Being concerned about people taking advantage of it is a rather ridiculous validation when you think about it; much like saying children were molested so we should get rid of day cares and baby sitters. Face it, if this really were about protecting our children, these would have been the same people rallying for

If we want to protect our children, there should be bathrooms for adult males separate from children, period. Trans-gendered people would just like to take a piss without being glared at, beat up, or sexually assaulted themselves.

My biggest gripe about the movie was that his plan had to take a freaking fortune teller to actually make work

Prince wrote the song...

Just means in one stage one player has the advantage, the next stage the other one does, and the third round they were even. If you lost on your ideal time of day, you were in for a serious disadvantage.

Felt the same way about the combat, and I know why. After playing both Arkham Origins and Shadow of Mordor, you can notice how ‘on rails’ the combat in Arkham Knight really was. In the two former games, enemies didn’t attack you in the same timing consistently, they changed their rhythm and made a mistake heavily

Yeah, he’s not wearing those blues in any way near regulation. And that hair? He needs to get to the butcher and un-fuck himself ASAP!

Dude, you’re taking vague story outlines and saying it’s the exact same thing without giving credit to nuance. The whole point of Episode VII following the same guidelines as Episode IV was to invoke symmetry; they were saying this even before the movie was released that it’s intentional. To keep saying it’s the same

Noooooo, as long as I had been going from 1998 (the last time it was in Atlanta, GA) to about 2004 (World of Warcraft Beta release), it was not open to the public. Hell, they even started enforcing the rule of no children after issues with the comedian Sinbad’s children, and the... I think it was Purple Moon Girls

I should have said “maybe not” rather than, “no”, but it was in response to Aikage’s opinion rather than the general public. It’s obviously just as relevant to the home consumer actually, since E3 probably decides more than anything else the reception of new gaming products. TGS has itself diminished its relevance,

I don’t recall E3 ever being open to the public. There probably was a demand for it to be public around that time because PAX was open to the public, but they have made it quite clear that it is a trade show for professionals and industry participants. I think the closest they came to making it public was relaxing

To the consumer at home, no. To the developers looking for publishers, smaller technology companies looking for a gaming company to invest in their technologies and development processes, to the smaller gaming stores trying to get in with a publisher to get some extra copies of a hot game to sell, yes it does.

Considering all the deals and networking made at E3, Hell yeah it’s relevant. The people that ask this question are the ones who have been to it enough to just become jaded with it. Hell, just the gaming showcases in the Kentia Hall alone has made overnight successes of many small companies when the big boys tour and

I still subscribe to the theory that it was beer that turned us into an agrarian culture...