That's pretty blatant. I wasn't expecting it to be so one to one.
That's pretty blatant. I wasn't expecting it to be so one to one.
The article says it’s a commercial, but the thing is nearly 5 minutes long. It’s a whole song. I dunno how commercials work in Japan, but who's even playing a 5 minute ad?!
I looks like the amateur just doesn't know where he is being shot from, and is looking for the enemy, while the pro already has an idea as to where to look/shoot.
When I still played CS:S alot Ihad a “porn spray” server saved in my favorites. People would just use it as a odd way to look at porn as they played. I used it as a way to wreck teams with little effort when the mood struck, as half the people were to busy looking at the sprays.
I'm guessing the game is/was just fresh in peoples minds, or were playing it when they put in their votes. With that said, who even votes on this stuff anyway?
It’s interesting to me to see how people react to, and enjoy new tech/gaming differently. I was super pumped for VR when Oculus was first showing things off and doing dev kits. Then, I had a kid and quickly realized that VR just wasn’t going to be a do-able thing for me. Last year while visiting family, my younger…
Activision is one of the largest videogame publishers in the world, and yet I can’t think of what the last Activision published game was that I bought.
Landmark game, Not games. And no self respecting PC gamer is going to be buying entry level anything.
It’s good now, but once you play the 3rd, or 4th Star Wars game that’s exactly like this one, you might be thinking differently. It’s like all the assassin’s creed games that were all the same thay people things aren’t special when you keep getting them.
Basic rights? We are talking about a friendly agreement, not a constitution.
It’s what the game needs. To many flaws at the root of the game that just patches, tweaks, more content, and bug fixes won’t be enough. I welcome their attempt to make it a good game.
It’s real people, spending real time, and money, playing, and working together. In a raid setting like this, agreed upon loot rules would be set beforehand. An agreement that he then reneged on. It doesn’t matter if the item in question is real world food, or a in-game item. Both take an investment of time, and hold a…
It’s not a bannable offense in the game. Well, unless they have changed something since I stopped playing. And he wasn’t banned from the game. But, it is something that will get you kicked from a guild, and blacklisted on a server. Your name will get put out their, and people won’t group with you. Guilds won’t take…
You don’t fuck over other people like that to play a part. Everyones in on it when a heel plays the part. They aren't really screwing anyone, cus everyone is in on it. That wasn't the case here.
And people wonder why Twitch streamers get so much hate.
Feel like the maturity level required to do something that risks your life and well being (F1 racing), is much higher then that needed to playing a videogame on camera.
It is what many people refer to it as. The 16 year old that just got banned from Fortnight had people coming to his defense because it was his career, and how he made money.
Can we get Brian Ashcraft on this? His translations and explanations are always great.
Oh, well this is disappointing. I was expecting something like an AR creative mode, where you could just build things in your living room or backyard. Instead, it's Pokemon Go, Minecraft. I guess that's on me for thinking it was suppose to be something else.
I’d say that someone who is a professional should take their career more seriously, but he's a fucking teenager. So this sounds like typical teenager shit.