Well, glad to see the issue's been settled for now. I think from this point on games are going to become such a huge part of our culture that it'll be a no-brainer that they fall under freedom of speech.
I really don't see why people see "Project $10" as so wrong. I mean, I think it's an effective way of getting people to buy a game new without resorting to extreme content-cutting measures. Mass Effect 2 was still eminently playable without the bonus content.
After watching this [http://www.gametrailers.com/video/tgs-10-catherine/704757] trailer for it, my interest in this game went way up.
Looks like a good erotic psychological thriller. But Japanese and really freakin' weird.
I beg to differ.
I don't even really think the iPhone "changed gaming". What's done on the iPad will be very similar to what's done on the iPhone, which is just an evolution of DS-type games.
I think this kind of thing applies to all hobbies, though. Especially the nerdy ones.
I mean, you can't really call yourself a film buff until you've seen all of Ingmar Bergman's films 15 times, right?
I liked the first 2 Spider-Man films, and think it's awesome that Raimi went against Sony instead of making a movie he didn't believe in.
It's much too early for a re-boot. Yeah, there are some small aspects of the original films that could be improved, but the likelihood that they'll just...
While work definitely should not cause someone to deteriorate physically, I think "crunch time" is a pretty normal part of any kind of job where a product must be delivered by a certain date.
Still, conditions shouldn't be that bad.
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