xenphi
xenphi
xenphi

Needs more wobble bass.

It's interesting that these weapons are based on real technology. The assault rifle and heavy weapons might be a little farther out, but the laser-induced plasma channel pistol is actually based on existing tech that the U.S. military is testing.

My SSD actually serves up files before I ask for it.

It's both action and commerce. The action, though, is pretty similar to regular MMOs, though there's a more technical part to it. Try it out. The first 30 days are free and the introduction tutorials gives you a nice general overview of everything you can do in EVE.

nope

Goddammit, Kotaku, I got incredibly excited. Stop messing with me!

No problem, as long as they agree the same with books, movies, tv shows and any future media to adhere to those rules and also regulated by the government.

What, no Skyrim?

However, the book is a format that excludes the traditional spoken tradition and the book trade needs to find a way urgently to support their presence, otherwise there is a danger that speakers will drop out of sight permanently for many listeners.

The only thing I dislike about this is no one releases sales numbers so we can compare if a DRM-free approach is any better than standard approaches. It depends on the games, to be sure, but you can get a lot of insight with more games released with different approaches to DRM.

This was my first thought, too, but it seems more like personnel training than pushing an ideology.

Video games, like other media, doesn't exist in a cultural vacuum. Journalism about that media doesn't either.

What, no Flower?

I agree with TheLoot. You don't get a license agreement when you eat your groceries.

I disagree. The PC is the biggest source of creative indie games. It takes much more financial investment to develop on consoles and consoles more creatively restrictive.

O.o

The poet?

I'll take that statement seriously if the anchors are willing to eat a Bhut Jolokia pepper without drinking milk.