Given his former employer owns the game he commentates for, he has plenty to lose responding back still.
Given his former employer owns the game he commentates for, he has plenty to lose responding back still.
Gabe will still be self-employed after making the comment though, while Harding stands to gain little from retorting.
Something tells me the roles are a little different when you own the company in question. Still unprofessional to call him an ass probably, but it’s not like you can cancel that out with some unprofessionalness of your own.
I can’t say that was my experience with Burger King (the kuro burger I tried was kinda a mess), but McDonald’s has generally been picturesque in terms of how their burgers come out. As an American I’ve been generally predisposed to not expect my burgers to look like the picture when ordering fast food.
My issue with the PS+ lineup is that it’s largely become a collection of games I already own because they’re titles that came out on Steam a good deal before they ever came out onto a Sony system. They’re not bad, obviously I bought them for a reason, but other than not buying indie games on the off chance they end up…
While there are some similarities, I don’t know that he’s motivated by quite the same reasons. He’s dealing with a comparatively niche title, and Japanese sales still lean more towards physical copies. He can’t guarantee his game will be on shelves long enough to recoup investment if there isn’t enough interest at…
Not necessarily. These are already niche games even in their home market. But even more so in the West. And the big difference is Japanese gamers are usually more willing to pay a premium for that kind of niche filling compared to the West, which tends towards more static price points. And then you add the cost of…
Arguably, most crowd funding is effectively “develop game once enough people bought it.” Except with the additional caveat that a backer isn’t guaranteed a product or a refund, while a preorder does.
AAA studios delay their own games too, to avoid releasing against big competition or fit within a particular sales period (and when they don’t, you have things like the recent Tomb Raider, releasing against bigger titles like Battlefront and Fallout 4.)
Guessing Danganronpa run through a spelling checker.
Yeah, I hear lots of stories about how awesome the original screen is, but after having to compare the old model with my 2000 model I can’t say I’d trade the lighter weight and better battery life for it.
I get the impression that the snark would have been there regardless of when it aired.
The father isn’t telling you how to enjoy your video games.
Technically, the only thing that was changed was gender-specific language towards the player character. The changes don’t make the protagonist one gender or the other, but leaves it open to player interpretation.
Sounds like it.
No one’s shoving anything down anyone’s throat, but man, you’re really mad about this. And that’s tragically hilarious. Like, seriously, you brought cuckolding into the topic. How bothered do you have to be about a minor script change to a couple decade old video game to start making accusations about his wife…
Go for it. More power to you. I’d note though that the father here specifically just made references to the player character gender neutral, not necessarily one way or the other.
Whose being devisive here, exactly?
The FBI has no way of knowing whether the phone has anything useful to them though. It’s just speculation at this point.
It’s not a unique design conceit. It’s ostensibly the point of games like Super Meat Boy or Hotline Miami, games you’re meant to die early and often, but that minimize downtime to keep gameplay going. Then you’ve got things like Super Hexagon, where most of your time will probably look like this but when you’re on top…