zerokei
zerokei
zerokei

They never bothered with one for Mass Effect 3, so that might prove to be the case with DA:I too.

They never bothered with one for Mass Effect 3, so that might prove to be the case with DA:I too.

I’m studying abroad, and the apartment and it’s internet access are provided for, not unlike a dorm. You don’t usually get to bring your own router in those situations.

I’m studying abroad, and the apartment and it’s internet access are provided for, not unlike a dorm. You don’t

I think other companies are unlikely to go at it like Apple, and just toss out standard USB altogether like the devices were ubiquitous already. I think that makes more sense than just assuming you’ll carry around an adaptor all the time just to plug anything into it.

I think other companies are unlikely to go at it like Apple, and just toss out standard USB altogether like the

Well, you’re the one taking issue with having a 4 at the end.

If they were called episodes would you have had an issue? I don’t think it’s fair to consider them in the same way we might look at say, iterative Call of Duty titles or Ubisoft doing yearly Assassin’s Creed games.

I don’t know, I kinda feel it’ll be longer than that. I have at least a dozen still used USB-A devices. Video game controllers, tablets, smartphones, my 3DS charger, USB hard drives, a printer, an old mp3 player.

I don’t know, I kinda feel it’ll be longer than that. I have at least a dozen still used USB-A devices. Video game

I think the thing I dislike the most about Apple is how my usage should apparently fit the lack of fairly basic functionality the opt to ship their laptops with. What does not including more than one USB port or an ethernet port gain the user?

I think the thing I dislike the most about Apple is how my usage should apparently fit the lack of fairly basic

I don’t know that it’s the engine; I’ve seen at least one Freddy clone that seemed better at encouraging you to care about using the cams more and it was built on the same engine. It’s more that his mechanics can be distilled into ignoring the greater majority in favor of just keeping a few particular plates spinning

They’re a YouTube phenomenon that he likely can’t sustain interest in indefinitely but that he can produce quickly and has so far maintained a somewhat novel twist in mechanics every time he does it.

Given their output, it’s a shame they don’t do more serial works. I still like Penny Arcade, but I think I’d trade the topical gag comic three times a week for full time Automata comics at whatever pace they could finish a decent enough chunk to throw up on the webpage.

I don’t know that they have more features in the older games, but they did structure Sims different than both The Sims 2 and 3, which is why I think it’s a matter of performance. Specifically, they’ve dramatically curbed the amount of data that builds up over time with a Sim.

It’s not bad art, but it does seem increasingly overkill for a three panel gag comic.

They added family trees in, and I know there’s some mod work done already for story progression. EA hasn’t done much in the latter regard. I suspect they may be avoiding adding anything like it for performance reasons. I generally like 4, but it does feel like they cut a lot of features that caused performance issues

To be honest, the vacation expansions were usually the least enjoyable for me. Having to switch between neighborhoods (and sit through the lengthy load process both ways) just to go on vacation was obnoxious.

Three’s issues were largely tied up to how big games got. It’s not an unheard of issue with other big scope games; Bethesda’s RPGs often suffer from it too, save files get bloated over time and performance issues start piling up.

Just because it’s free doesn’t mean it gets a pass. Nintendo has played catchup in pretty much every regard involving the internet, and their online account system is still worst of the three (merely HAVING an account is free for all three of them, so let’s not pretend it’s some huge advantage to Nintendo here. For

I had to look this up, because I can’t say I follow the guy, but he was apparently going to college when he got his start. Yeah, it’s definitely a privilege to have parents pay for college, but the ability to do YouTube videos as a hobby at the same time isn’t especially. And by the time he dropped out, he was likely

Is that really a thing that applies to people famous for playing video games on the Internet? Like, it’s not really something you can buy your way into. No one’s going to care about your awesome computer if you’re not interesting to watch. Part of what allows these individuals to be successful is how relatively cheap

Like this hot dog stand job was the genesis of his webcam show setup and all the gear provided...right, sure.

There were some 34 million NESs sold in the Americas alone. Surely you could reserve your ire for a more rare console than the NES? Not every one of them need be meticulously preserved like it was some sort of museum piece.