Been a hot minute since I played but the only way I found MtG (and most board and tabletop games, to be honest) enjoyable was playing with actual friends.
Been a hot minute since I played but the only way I found MtG (and most board and tabletop games, to be honest) enjoyable was playing with actual friends.
I admit kinda dig it, though. I’m reasonably certain a more faithful translation would’ve had more front and rear overhang. I’dve ditched any attempt to emulate that belt line. Part of the issue was the concept rode on a bespoke chassis, IIRC.
That said, they literally should’ve copy-pasted this and worked from there:
The annoying thing is, if the Switch Pro rumor mill plays out closely to the manner I think it should*, it’ll eventually become a moot point for me. I’ll still be torqued as I’d be on the hook for a second copy.
*Since the improved proc (and the unit itself) is all but confirmed, my main requirement is a bezel-less…
Sadly, this is 100% accurate. I have little hope there.
Maybe he’s throwing some strong shade at Louisiana?
I’m oddly fascinated by “not a remake/remaster” statement and I suspect some Playstation and Switch modders are probably currently salivating because of it. You see, Stubbs was the only other game built on the poopy “Halo” engine that was written by some insignificant little company. . . Bungie, I think it was. . . ?…
I know I’m just shouting into the void hear but:
How about Nintendo stops with fucking stupid trinkets and lets my wife and I have our own damn islands on our shared Switch?
Oh they’re almost certainly functional. It’s just that heat management isn’t the reason.
Primary purpose of fender vents is relieving pressure that builds up in your wheel wells, especially at high speeds, both from the rotation of the wheels and any air ducted in to cool the rotors. That pressure’ll actually generate an amount of lift, which is why your front end starts feeling “floaty” as you start…
Side benefit, maybe, but fender vents are about aerodynamics and relieving pressure from the wheel well.
Lemme be that guy:
Every time you’re in the liquor store in Japan, it feels like you see a brand you’ve never heard of before, that has no providence and no history, but somehow is Japanese whisky.
MIT’s 3D solar tower array’s been around for a hot minute and shows a lot of promise. Just curious, outside of your neighbors/HOA calling for your blood, was this sort of thing brought up as an option when you discussed the system’s design?
And that’s my problem.
The Switch joycon stick module uses a couple screws and a ribbon cable. DIY is super easy with little required beyond patience and basic tool skills. The DS4/5 requires some familiarity with soldering electronics components, with the attendant equipment on hand. It’s a bit much for the masses.
I bought one of the McFarlane Halo 3 XBox 360 controllers on sale literally over a decade ago. I still use it for almost all my PC gaming: no drift, no issues.
We’ve had sticks and wear down pat for a while now, at least since they figured out the droopy N64 stick, and I’m inclined to believe these current issues are…
That was my first thought as well, and is probably the winner for “Most Deserving.”
Just watched iFixit’s teardown of the controller. Ouch! The ‘sticks are still soldered to the motherboard so repair is not an easy proposition.
Hall-effect: good enough to control the go AND slow in your car, and push shit around in space.