Happy endings. We like them.
Happy endings. We like them.
I once took a calculator to the local convenience store and "did the math" for them. I got my penny back. It wasn't so much that I needed that penny as it was the principle of the whole thing.
Preaching to the choir about Anita Sarkeesian.
Have fun at PAX East. I forgot about it until it was too late. Pretty sad, because I only live about two and a half hours away from Boston and could have taken the train down.
I think your comment was better than my blog. Good article, thank you for linking it. I hadn't really done a whole lot of thinking about it from that perspective, but it does make things go "click" in my head. I am just old enough to remember the last year or two of Vietnam in the news and friends of my parents and uncles coming back. It seems like we were less gung-ho about Vietnam than we are about the current "war on terror". Thanks for giving me something to mull over.
Jason knows an awful lot about guns, too, and he learned it in the stacks in the library. That's not really the point I was trying to make, though. I was wondering why devs can't come up with something better than just shooting the billy bejeesus out of everything. I like the concept of being able to deal with conflict in story telling in a way that doesn't make you have to do battle every 15 seconds or so. I also have my moments where I do want to blow crap up and shoot so many holes in things that they resemble swiss cheese.
Game Informer has ridiculously tiny font and whoever made that decision should be tarred and feathered and ridden out of town on a rail. So no, it's not your eyes.
I love the idea of fighting games with squeaky hammers and pillows for weapons. I might actually play one then, lol.
I do remember those blogs and I thought they were great.
The Whole of the Moon was the song that turned me on to them back in college. I love his lyrics and the way he mixes literature and fable into his songs.
The version of The Parting Glass in Waking Ned Devine has been tweaked to fit the symphonic score, so many folkies get their knickers in a twist about it. I like it personally, but it has been altered. I leave you with my second favorite (but more "authentic") version by The Clancy Brothers and Louis Killen.
You're our very own MGS expert, aren't you?