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Post by Deleted on Mar 21, 2017 16:36:16 GMT -5
I played the Medieval Warfare game a bit this weekend. The main frustrating part for me is it seems the entire campaign is only online multiplayer missions and objectives. The gameplay itself is decent, however I'm very dissappointed there is no offline single-player campaign. You can set up some free-for-all type games vs bots, but none of the missions. The other problem I discovered is that in order to play online, others have to be online (obviously). The problem is this is not a well-circulated game, so I was playing a bunch of bots off and on for an hour and literally no other people were on for multiplayer. So that sucked. I have NO multiplayer experience but I've been kind of curious about them in the past few days. So, I asked the clerk at Gamestop about it. In addition to the general "What is multiplayer?" I thought I had to get a bunch of friends together to start a campaign together in whatever game you're playing. Apparently, you don't need to. I said to the clerk, "Let's say I want to play a Battlefield multiplayer game at a particular time in the morning, what are the odds that there will be a bunch of other gamers who want to play that same multiplayer game at the exact same time as you?" He said, "You'd be surprised. Everyone's constantly playing something at all hours, even games that are 5-8 years old." It just boggled my mind. Based on your experience, that's not the case. Sometimes, there's no one else around who wants to play with you. This sounds more "right" to me than what the clerk told me. I just find it hard to believe several people are out there who want to play the exact same game that you want to play at the exact same time. For games like GTA or sports games, that probably is the case. This is the game I was playing: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chivalry:_Medieval_Warfare. It has favorable reviews, but it's not popular in terms of sales. It doesn't have near the audience that GTA, COD, NBA 2K, or Madden would have.
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Post by mikegarrison on Mar 21, 2017 16:49:55 GMT -5
Without fully understanding your tips, they sound very helpful, if that makes any sense. I'm currently at the 3rd or 4th objective/mission -- at the Medical Pavilion -- and then saved/quit to take a breather. Based on my past fps experience, I've already developed a habit of searching rooms and bodies for stuff (e.g., bullets, guns, dollars). I didn't realize I should also check the trash cans. I guess I should develop a homeless mentality -- search everything for valuables. After the radio message guy (forgot his name), told me about the one-two punch (electric bolt followed by wrench attack), I've been using that fight strategy the whole time. I tried using my pistol, but that didn't stop those Reapers (I think that's what they're called.) Whenever I'm in Plasmid mode with my electro bolt hand out, I've been hesitant to wade in the water. I thought I would fry myself. LOL! Probably, nothing will happen. I'm still getting used to the controls. I'm on the PS3. In almost every fps game I've played, the L1 button is used for aiming and the R1 button for shooting. So, my muscle memory is based on that. Now, in Bioshock, the L1 is for switching/selecting the Plasmid and the R1 is for switching/selecting the weapon, while L2 and R2 are for shooting the corresponding Plasmid/weapon. It takes some getting used to. It's a very bizarre game set in a bizarre world. So far so good. Yes, you will totally fry yourself if you electrify the water you are standing in. But only if you actually fire it. You can the sparking ready-to-fire hand with no issues. It's not only trash cans that can contain stuff. Luggage. Cash registers. Crates. Desks. Cabinets. You won't always find anything in all of them, but you can scrounge a lot of stuff. Safes have good stuff, but they are hard to hack. Auto-hack tools are good to use with safes. As the game progresses, your plasmids will become less effective. You can upgrade them, however. But weapons become pretty important too. "That radio guy" is named Atlas. The enemies are called "splicers". The pistol will kill them, but it can take a few shots. You can also use special anti-personnel rounds that do more damage. Big Daddies shrug off almost everything except major ordinance, and they are what you want to use armor-piercing rounds on. (A-P also works on turrets and cameras, but if you can it's better to hack those.) By the time you get to the end of the Medical Pavilion, you will have defeated the boss of that level (Dr. Steinman). He's your first real example of how the splicing drove people crazy there in Rapture. Sure, you've already seen the splicers, but they are sort of generic crazy people. Steinman is insane in a very specific way.
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Post by Wolfgang on Mar 22, 2017 16:17:30 GMT -5
In my Crysis 2 game, I was stuck at one checkpoint for the past 3 days, to the point where I thought about giving up. I tried again this morning and all of a sudden, not only do I get past that but I get to the next 3 checkpoints BAM BAM BAM just like that! Holy batf**k!
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Post by Wolfgang on Mar 22, 2017 20:26:08 GMT -5
Infamous -- super fun game. Really addictive. Over-the-top action. Open world. You choose to do whatever you want -- from main missions to side missions. Minimal scripted scenes. Not an intellectual game but boy, it's really addictive. You play the role of this dude who has, through some natural (or alien?) disaster, acquire a super power based on electricity. I didn't think I would enjoy super hero type games because, you know, I'm mature and all that. But I was wrong. Just like I was wrong that I wouldn't like war shooter games (e.g., Call of Duty, Battlefield).
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Post by Wolfgang on Mar 23, 2017 10:27:03 GMT -5
Without fully understanding your tips, they sound very helpful, if that makes any sense. I'm currently at the 3rd or 4th objective/mission -- at the Medical Pavilion -- and then saved/quit to take a breather. Based on my past fps experience, I've already developed a habit of searching rooms and bodies for stuff (e.g., bullets, guns, dollars). I didn't realize I should also check the trash cans. I guess I should develop a homeless mentality -- search everything for valuables. After the radio message guy (forgot his name), told me about the one-two punch (electric bolt followed by wrench attack), I've been using that fight strategy the whole time. I tried using my pistol, but that didn't stop those Reapers (I think that's what they're called.) Whenever I'm in Plasmid mode with my electro bolt hand out, I've been hesitant to wade in the water. I thought I would fry myself. LOL! Probably, nothing will happen. I'm still getting used to the controls. I'm on the PS3. In almost every fps game I've played, the L1 button is used for aiming and the R1 button for shooting. So, my muscle memory is based on that. Now, in Bioshock, the L1 is for switching/selecting the Plasmid and the R1 is for switching/selecting the weapon, while L2 and R2 are for shooting the corresponding Plasmid/weapon. It takes some getting used to. It's a very bizarre game set in a bizarre world. So far so good. Yes, you will totally fry yourself if you electrify the water you are standing in. But only if you actually fire it. You can the sparking ready-to-fire hand with no issues. It's not only trash cans that can contain stuff. Luggage. Cash registers. Crates. Desks. Cabinets. You won't always find anything in all of them, but you can scrounge a lot of stuff. Safes have good stuff, but they are hard to hack. Auto-hack tools are good to use with safes. As the game progresses, your plasmids will become less effective. You can upgrade them, however. But weapons become pretty important too. "That radio guy" is named Atlas. The enemies are called "splicers". The pistol will kill them, but it can take a few shots. You can also use special anti-personnel rounds that do more damage. Big Daddies shrug off almost everything except major ordinance, and they are what you want to use armor-piercing rounds on. (A-P also works on turrets and cameras, but if you can it's better to hack those.) By the time you get to the end of the Medical Pavilion, you will have defeated the boss of that level (Dr. Steinman). He's your first real example of how the splicing drove people crazy there in Rapture. Sure, you've already seen the splicers, but they are sort of generic crazy people. Steinman is insane in a very specific way. 1. I'm still at the Medical Pavilion but trying to get to the Emergency Access. (I got Steinman's key.) It took me about 90 minutes running around in that place. 2. Dr. Steinman was a biotch to take down. I incinerated him but he counters by running to the flooded area. I tried hitting him with the wrench after he emerged from waters. Nothing worked. I must've spent hundreds of bullets trying to kill him. Finally, I incinerated him and popped him with the shotgun and the f***er was dead. I lost so many red (health) and blue (eve) points in that battle. I was so exhausted afterwards. 3. I think I made a mistake keeping Incinerate and Telekinesis and giving up Electro-bolt. (I have only two Plasmid slots) Now, I can't seem to disable a turret or one of those flying bots. I have to pretty much use my telekinesis to throw stuff at them. Hopefully, I'll run into a gene bank soon so that I can get additional slots. 4. I was able to kill 3 Big Daddies and heal 2 Little Sisters along the way. I was also killed by a Big Daddy once. My experience with Dr. Steinman helped in taking down the Big Daddies. Incinerate plus shotgun blasts. 5. Those splicers are psychologically scary. I know I can kill them easily with a couple good whacks with the wrench or some combo move, but that doesn't make them less scary. They move pretty fast. 6. I was getting annoyed at the constant searches of corpses, desks, containers, purses, etc. but after awhile, I've gotten used to it. Besides, I'm now at the point where I need all that junk to upgrade my powers and buy more bullets. I never thought to buy bullets because they seemed to be lying everywhere but after my encounter with Dr. Steinman, I ran out. So, I went to the nearest vending machine and bought some.
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Post by mikegarrison on Mar 24, 2017 16:28:14 GMT -5
Yes, you will totally fry yourself if you electrify the water you are standing in. But only if you actually fire it. You can the sparking ready-to-fire hand with no issues. It's not only trash cans that can contain stuff. Luggage. Cash registers. Crates. Desks. Cabinets. You won't always find anything in all of them, but you can scrounge a lot of stuff. Safes have good stuff, but they are hard to hack. Auto-hack tools are good to use with safes. As the game progresses, your plasmids will become less effective. You can upgrade them, however. But weapons become pretty important too. "That radio guy" is named Atlas. The enemies are called "splicers". The pistol will kill them, but it can take a few shots. You can also use special anti-personnel rounds that do more damage. Big Daddies shrug off almost everything except major ordinance, and they are what you want to use armor-piercing rounds on. (A-P also works on turrets and cameras, but if you can it's better to hack those.) By the time you get to the end of the Medical Pavilion, you will have defeated the boss of that level (Dr. Steinman). He's your first real example of how the splicing drove people crazy there in Rapture. Sure, you've already seen the splicers, but they are sort of generic crazy people. Steinman is insane in a very specific way. 1. I'm still at the Medical Pavilion but trying to get to the Emergency Access. (I got Steinman's key.) It took me about 90 minutes running around in that place. 2. Dr. Steinman was a biotch to take down. I incinerated him but he counters by running to the flooded area. I tried hitting him with the wrench after he emerged from waters. Nothing worked. I must've spent hundreds of bullets trying to kill him. Finally, I incinerated him and popped him with the shotgun and the f***er was dead. I lost so many red (health) and blue (eve) points in that battle. I was so exhausted afterwards. 3. I think I made a mistake keeping Incinerate and Telekinesis and giving up Electro-bolt. (I have only two Plasmid slots) Now, I can't seem to disable a turret or one of those flying bots. I have to pretty much use my telekinesis to throw stuff at them. Hopefully, I'll run into a gene bank soon so that I can get additional slots. 4. I was able to kill 3 Big Daddies and heal 2 Little Sisters along the way. I was also killed by a Big Daddy once. My experience with Dr. Steinman helped in taking down the Big Daddies. Incinerate plus shotgun blasts. 5. Those splicers are psychologically scary. I know I can kill them easily with a couple good whacks with the wrench or some combo move, but that doesn't make them less scary. They move pretty fast. 6. I was getting annoyed at the constant searches of corpses, desks, containers, purses, etc. but after awhile, I've gotten used to it. Besides, I'm now at the point where I need all that junk to upgrade my powers and buy more bullets. I never thought to buy bullets because they seemed to be lying everywhere but after my encounter with Dr. Steinman, I ran out. So, I went to the nearest vending machine and bought some. That's pretty good. I usually get killed several times by each Big Daddy I take down. I guess I don't use the shotgun enough. I prefer shooting from distance. I assume you know this by now, but if you hack the ammo vending machines, the prices are lower. And sometimes you get free ammo. But they are among the harder machines to hack. If you fail to hack a vending machine or a safe, flying drones will be sent after you. But if you can knock one out and hack it, that's actually a source of drones you can capture. You want scary splicers, wait until you get to the level with ... well, let me just ask, have you ever seen the Doctor Who episodes with the weeping angels? The ones that only attack you when you look away? Well there is a level where there are many statues. Except some of those statues are really splicers. And the lights periodically go out. And they attack you in the dark. The bastards. Spider splicers are particularly scary because they come at you from above while ranting about sin and Christ. It's like an atheist's nightmare.
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Post by Wolfgang on Mar 24, 2017 16:32:39 GMT -5
1. I'm still at the Medical Pavilion but trying to get to the Emergency Access. (I got Steinman's key.) It took me about 90 minutes running around in that place. 2. Dr. Steinman was a biotch to take down. I incinerated him but he counters by running to the flooded area. I tried hitting him with the wrench after he emerged from waters. Nothing worked. I must've spent hundreds of bullets trying to kill him. Finally, I incinerated him and popped him with the shotgun and the f***er was dead. I lost so many red (health) and blue (eve) points in that battle. I was so exhausted afterwards. 3. I think I made a mistake keeping Incinerate and Telekinesis and giving up Electro-bolt. (I have only two Plasmid slots) Now, I can't seem to disable a turret or one of those flying bots. I have to pretty much use my telekinesis to throw stuff at them. Hopefully, I'll run into a gene bank soon so that I can get additional slots. 4. I was able to kill 3 Big Daddies and heal 2 Little Sisters along the way. I was also killed by a Big Daddy once. My experience with Dr. Steinman helped in taking down the Big Daddies. Incinerate plus shotgun blasts. 5. Those splicers are psychologically scary. I know I can kill them easily with a couple good whacks with the wrench or some combo move, but that doesn't make them less scary. They move pretty fast. 6. I was getting annoyed at the constant searches of corpses, desks, containers, purses, etc. but after awhile, I've gotten used to it. Besides, I'm now at the point where I need all that junk to upgrade my powers and buy more bullets. I never thought to buy bullets because they seemed to be lying everywhere but after my encounter with Dr. Steinman, I ran out. So, I went to the nearest vending machine and bought some. That's pretty good. I usually get killed several times by each Big Daddy I take down. I guess I don't use the shotgun enough. I prefer shooting from distance. I assume you know this by now, but if you hack the ammo vending machines, the prices are lower. And sometimes you get free ammo. But they are among the harder machines to hack. If you fail to hack a vending machine or a safe, flying drones will be sent after you. But if you can knock one out and hack it, that's actually a source of drones you can capture. You want scary splicers, wait until you get to the level with ... well, let me just ask, have you ever seen the Doctor Who episodes with the weeping angels? The ones that only attack you when you look away? Well there is a level where there are many statues. Except some of those statues are really splicers. And the lights periodically go out. And they attack you in the dark. The bastards. Spider splicers are particularly scary because they come at you from above while ranting about sin and Christ. It's like an atheist's nightmare.Ha ha ha...I laughed so hard at this comment about sin and Christ and it being an atheist's nightmare! I'm almost always a quiet spectator at sporting events. When I watch sports on TV (by myself or with friends), I don't shout at the TV or whoop and holler. Not even high-fives. I don't curse when my team gets down or jump up or down when met team scores. I'm very sedate. But when I come across a splicer or a Big Daddy, I mutter, "You little f*ckers!" This is not necessarily a horror game but the whole vibe in that underwater city of Rapture is pretty haunting because of the contrast of the early 20th century environment and the eery sounds.
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Post by mikegarrison on Mar 24, 2017 18:19:53 GMT -5
I'm almost always a quiet spectator at sporting events. When I watch sports on TV (by myself or with friends), I don't shout at the TV or whoop and holler. Not even high-fives. I don't curse when my team gets down or jump up or down when met team scores. I'm very sedate. But when I come across a splicer or a Big Daddy, I mutter, "You little f*ckers!" This is not necessarily a horror game but the whole vibe in that underwater city of Rapture is pretty haunting because of the contrast of the early 20th century environment and the eery sounds. Yes, the environment is an important part of the game experience. As an aside, since I'm playing XCOM again, I have a similar confession. There are certain aliens you fight in XCOM who can mind-control your own soldiers, leaving you with some unhappy decisions to make about whether you should kill one of your own in order to save the rest of them. Anyway, when I see one of those aliens, I always make my squad prioritize killing them. And when I do, I usually verbalize something like, "I got you, you little mind-raper!"
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Post by Wolfgang on Mar 24, 2017 19:41:46 GMT -5
I'm almost always a quiet spectator at sporting events. When I watch sports on TV (by myself or with friends), I don't shout at the TV or whoop and holler. Not even high-fives. I don't curse when my team gets down or jump up or down when met team scores. I'm very sedate. But when I come across a splicer or a Big Daddy, I mutter, "You little f*ckers!" This is not necessarily a horror game but the whole vibe in that underwater city of Rapture is pretty haunting because of the contrast of the early 20th century environment and the eery sounds. Yes, the environment is an important part of the game experience. As an aside, since I'm playing XCOM again, I have a similar confession. There are certain aliens you fight in XCOM who can mind-control your own soldiers, leaving you with some unhappy decisions to make about whether you should kill one of your own in order to save the rest of them. Anyway, when I see one of those aliens, I always make my squad prioritize killing them. And when I do, I usually verbalize something like, "I got you, you little mind-raper!" Jeez, mike, this is not much of a confession. A confession is more like, "Father McNully, I've murdered someone. Also, I've had many lustful thoughts of Sally Baumgartner."
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Post by Wolfgang on Mar 26, 2017 22:49:21 GMT -5
2. Incredibly funny utterances by the people who populate this fictional city. For example, I ordered a hamburger and the waitress handed it to me and said, "I picked this up off the floor." Or if I accidentally (or purposefully) bump into someone while walking (I'm still trying to learn how to walk with total control), they would say, "Hey, EXCUUUUSE me, d**chebag." This is just a really hilarious game. Many of these "open world" games try for that. For instance, Skyrim has some really hilarious things that random passers-by may say to you, as well as a lot of funny stuff in the scripted encounters. I think maybe my favorite one is when you are wearing a dagger called Mehrune's Razor. In order to get it, you have to collect all the pieces of it and give them to a guy named Silus. Then you go with Silus to Mehrune's altar where you pray to Mehrune to reforge his Razor. But he will only do it if you first kill Silas. Later, as you walk around with it on your hip, random people will sometimes compliment you on it. "Wow, nice dagger! Who do you have to kill to get something like that?" There is another quest where you have kill the mean old lady ("Grelod The Kind") that runs an orphanage. When you do, all the orphans get really excited and run up to you thanking you. They say things like: "Oh my goodness!", "We love you, Dark Brotherhood! Ha ha ha ha ha!" "Whoa! They killed Grelod! Ha ha ha ha ha!" "Someone has killed Grelod! Ha ha ha ha ha!" "Kill one person, and you can solve so many problems. I wonder at the possibilities." Just revisiting this post because I've lately been reading about Elder Scrolls. From Wikipedia, the first three Elder Scrolls games (Arena, Daggerfall, Morowind) are only available on MS-DOS (Morowind is also available on Xbox, but I don't own an Xbox). However, Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion and Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, are available on PS3, which is what I have. Based on the Internet message boards, it looks like I can play Skyrim before Oblivion because the storylines are different. However, some say I would get more out of the games if I play them in sequence. Obviously, I can't play the first three because I don't own systems on those platforms. Thoughts?
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Post by mikegarrison on Mar 27, 2017 9:39:17 GMT -5
Many of these "open world" games try for that. For instance, Skyrim has some really hilarious things that random passers-by may say to you, as well as a lot of funny stuff in the scripted encounters. I think maybe my favorite one is when you are wearing a dagger called Mehrune's Razor. In order to get it, you have to collect all the pieces of it and give them to a guy named Silus. Then you go with Silus to Mehrune's altar where you pray to Mehrune to reforge his Razor. But he will only do it if you first kill Silas. Later, as you walk around with it on your hip, random people will sometimes compliment you on it. "Wow, nice dagger! Who do you have to kill to get something like that?" There is another quest where you have kill the mean old lady ("Grelod The Kind") that runs an orphanage. When you do, all the orphans get really excited and run up to you thanking you. They say things like: "Oh my goodness!", "We love you, Dark Brotherhood! Ha ha ha ha ha!" "Whoa! They killed Grelod! Ha ha ha ha ha!" "Someone has killed Grelod! Ha ha ha ha ha!" "Kill one person, and you can solve so many problems. I wonder at the possibilities." Just revisiting this post because I've lately been reading about Elder Scrolls. From Wikipedia, the first three Elder Scrolls games (Arena, Daggerfall, Morowind) are only available on MS-DOS (Morowind is also available on Xbox, but I don't own an Xbox). However, Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion and Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, are available on PS3, which is what I have. Based on the Internet message boards, it looks like I can play Skyrim before Oblivion because the storylines are different. However, some say I would get more out of the games if I play them in sequence. Obviously, I can't play the first three because I don't own systems on those platforms. Thoughts? I've never played the first two. Morrowind is the one that really put the Elder Scrolls on the map. Starting with Morrowind, they are all open-world role playing games. With some variations, you start out weak and puny and you end up becoming a great hero. In all cases, you gain skills by using them. So, for instance, you want to be a great magic user? Use a lot of magic. You want to be a great sword fighter? Swing your sword a lot. You can also buy skill improvements from certain NPCs known as trainers. Morrowind, Oblivion, and Skyrim are all available for Windows from Steam. (Morrowind is a little prone to crashing -- save often.) PC is really the way to play these games, because a) there is a huge community of players who have fixed a lot of the bugs and made them available as a PC patch and b) you can use the "console" commands (like cheat codes, but you can use them to fix problems and not just cheat). The console command I use the most is "tcl" -- toggle collision. In the (rare) case where I have somehow gotten stuck somewhere (fallen between two rocks or something) I can enter tcl and then become like a ghost. I can move right through rocks, float in the air, etc. Once I get myself out of where I was stuck, I tcl again and I'm back to normal. The Elder Scrolls games all have a huge backstory that stays consistent. They are all set on the same continent, inhabited by mer (elves), men, and "the beast races" (lizard-like Argonians and cat-like Kahjit). In Morrowind you are on the island or Vardenfell, home of the dunmer. In Oblivion you are in Cyradil, seat of the Empire and home of the imperials (one of the types of men). In Skyrim you are in Skyrim (fancy that!), home of another race of men, the nords. Oblivion is set only a few years after Morrowind, but Skyrim is set about 200 years after Oblivion. Each game you have one main questline. In Morrowind you have to defeat a false god. In Oblivion you have to defeat a daedric prince (something like a god) that is trying to invade the world. In Skyrim you have to defeat an ancient god-like dragon that wants to destroy the world. But you can actually completely ignore these stories if you want. There are also questlines for guilds and factions (fighters' guild, theives' guild, etc.) as well as just random quests and dungeons all over the place. Nearly any random person you meet has some kind of a quest. In Morrowind, for instance, you can meet a woman on the road who has just been robbed. She wants you to find the bandit and tell him she thought he was cute and she wants to meet him again. In Oblivion you can meet a guy who wants you to kill some dangerous fish for him. In Skyrim you can find a dog on the side of the road. He wants you to follow him back to his house. (There are a bunch of dog-related quests in Skyrim, because that was the first game where they added dogs.) One of the little traditions of the elder scroll games is that you always start out as prisoner. In Morrowind you are set free at the start. In Oblivion your cell happens to house the secret escape route from the imperial palace, and the emperor (voiced by Patrick Stewart) meets you while attempting to escape from an assassination. In Skyrim you are about to be beheaded when a dragon attacks and you escape. Anyway, I would say there is no particular reason you have to play them in any order. There are a bunch of references in the later games to the earlier ones, but they are not really spoilers. For instance, in the last expansion of Skyrim you can go to the same island that was one of the expansions of Morrowind. When you get there in Skyrim, you land at the town of Raven Rock. In Morrwind, you help to found the town of Raven Rock, 200 years before.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 27, 2017 13:59:50 GMT -5
Spider splicers are particularly scary because they come at you from above while ranting about sin and Christ. It's like an atheist's nightmare.No, that would be the banana.
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Post by mikegarrison on Mar 27, 2017 21:23:40 GMT -5
Spider splicers are particularly scary because they come at you from above while ranting about sin and Christ. It's like an atheist's nightmare.No, that would be the banana. Ha ha ha ha! No, Kirk Cameron is atheist comedy. As if that banana had not been shaped by thousands of years of human cultivation? Here is what a wild banana (as made by God, according to that dude) looks like: Small, green, and full of seeds.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 28, 2017 12:13:34 GMT -5
No, that would be the banana. Ha ha ha ha! No, Kirk Cameron is atheist comedy. As if that banana had not been shaped by thousands of years of human cultivation? Here is what a wild banana (as made by God, according to that dude) looks like: Small, green, and full of seeds. When Ray Comfort was informed of this, he retracted his argument about the banana.
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Post by Wolfgang on Mar 31, 2017 11:35:16 GMT -5
Have you had one of those days/weeks when nothing went right?
I've been playing 5 video games concurrently. The past week, I was stuck in difficult sections of four of those five video games where no matter what I did, I kept dying. Hours and hours at the same checkpoint. Grrrr... So, I put them aside and played a totally new sixth video game. And then, after a couple of days, I returned to those four games and all of a sudden, BAM BAM BAM, I get through those difficult checkpoints. All I needed was a break. I think it forced me to do something different. Or maybe I put less pressure on myself to get through them because I just assumed I was going to die, so I think I started to perform better. I don't know.
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