Eff ... all ... of ... you. It was 10 whole dollars on Steam when I bought it! Well now I feel ripped off! 
Eff ... all ... of ... you. It was 10 whole dollars on Steam when I bought it! Well now I feel ripped off! 
Is it the Wizard of Dr. Oz behind those curtains?
Also, what are moogles? Is that a Final Fantasy reference?
To answer your question, I've been asking you questions.
Organ Trail sounds like a fun way to teach kids about dysentery in a bit more in-depth fashion.
I know what you mean. I never played this, and it does look stunning, but I hate pressing up to jump in platformers. That should always be a button. Is there no way to change the layout, though?
It depends on the movie, but I thought this was an interesting film for what it was, I'm just more interested in reading up on Lucas than I am in watching this again.
According to IMDB, he was also in several video games and played Ramrod in Batman Beyond.
I know that, but you have nostalgia for the game, since it was your first owned game, whereas I have virtually no nostalgia for it whatsoever.
I'm not saying it doesn't legitimately hold up or that you're blinded by nostalgia, but you do have nostalgia for it.
To be honest, I didn't go for a max or anything, I just increased from 45 to 65 lbs. for my reps ... and failed to hit the tenth rep on my fourth and fifth sets, so I'm taking it down to 60 lbs. next time, but it's the thought that counts right? It's all mental, after all. 
I was disappointed with the PS4s as well, and that's the one I'm leaning towards anyway and want to try. How was your PS4 experience?
I often think the U.S. education system should be more focused than it is on the real world, but the other extreme can have its drawbacks as well, I see. Personally, I think education should reflect the real world as much as possible. I remember learning about other schools that had mini "court systems" for disciplinary measures and students would represent themselves in court (or maybe they had five-year-old lawyers, I forget) if upset with something they got in trouble for. I think a good way to incorporate that into other areas of study, but still have a well-rounded education might be to always have the kids simulate something in the real world related to what they're learning. For example, maybe you could have done both art and math, but for your art class chosen to sell your drawings and see how successful a series you created would be, and for math courses you could have built things people needed using engineering math. The school would have its own economic system based on some form of Monopoly money, and taxes would go to math people helping create a bridge and if art kids wanted to make a school-appropriate comic book, they could sell it within the context of said economic system.
There's a lot that could go wrong and would have to be changed, but I like thinking about how to change education systems creatively, cause what the U.S. and specifically Texas is doing, teaching towards a test, is horrible.
Anyway, yeah, I like faces.