Well, personally, I feel like the 4 job fiesta makes it go a little faster, partially because you aren't always fiddling around with classes and min maxing all the time
More people have said that and been killed than there are thorium decay products.
22 hours is not bad at all actually. But I am the sort of person that has to run around and open all the little chests and hear what all the town people have to say and then spend like *hours* deciding what to buy at shops. >_>
"Whatever makes your class better" is hardly a hard decision. :P
Anyhow, got all four crystals, and Team "Hit them till they die" is fully operational. Monk/Berserker/Beastmaster/Dragoon. Faris is my MVP at this point in time, since she has some amazing captures.
So my brother and I started ze Borderlands 1 today.
It's fun. We're both Mordecai, with my suit of course being baby blue because REASONS. We got to level 7 so far, just did that one mission with the seeds for TK Baha. T'was stressful but successful.
He plays with his snoipah roifle and a shotgun, primarily. I tend to go for an SMG I bought early on and more recently a pistol named The Clipper that sets things on fire randomly. So much fun.
Meysell Quintana said it best: "This means the Xbox One is slightly more viable but still way too f--kin' expensive."
Meanwhile, I'm here laughing at the faux pas that was E3 for them and I can't help but wonder if now they'll try to integrate these methods in different ways.
i get so angry sometimes i just punch plankton --Klinotaxis
Guessing this will save the system from being a complete failure, though I'd imagine they've still given up much of their initial sales to Sony.
Interesting. I was wondering if they'd relent at some point or ride thins thing until it buried them. I thought they might wait until after launch and poor sales to take action, but this was a wiser decision.
Man is a most complex simple creature: see what he weaves, and how base his reasons for doing so.
"We're just babies making up a game, if you're right. But four babies playing a game can make a play-world which licks your real world hollow. That's why I'm going to stand by the play world. I'm on Aslan's side even if there isn't any Aslan to lead it. I'm going to live as like a Narnian as I can even if there isn't any Narnia."
It occurred to me recently that probably my favorite piece of content in the original Fable were the pristine, somber areas behind Demon Doors. I can't be the only one who loves those places, right?
Steam has introduced trading cards. It's one of the most devious marketing tactics since Zynga.
In order to get the cards, you need to play the games that they belong to. The amount of time you spend in the game dictates the number of cards that drop. In games where micro-transactions are allowed (i.e. Team Fortress 2, which is one of Steam's biggest cash cows), buying things in the game increases the number of drops that you get.
If you get all the cards for a game, you can convert them into a badge that can earn you emoticons, profile backgrounds or coupons. But it's impossible to get all the cards for a certain set through drops alone (and you might get two of the same card, which makes things even harder). So, you end up trading things (and eventually buying things) on the Steam Community Market (which apparently has existed for a while and I just never knew about it). And Steam skims a bit of money off the top for every transaction.
They made a game out of purchasing novelty items and coupon-clipping. It's evil, evil genius.
Trading cards instead of achievements? That's a pretty cool idea, actually. And I wouldn't exactly call that "devious" because, well, actual trading card games require you to buy them. I would hardly call that Zyngesque.
Valve's been making Steam far more businessy lately (see: what they did with Paranautical Activity and the Greenlight system in general), I don't like it.
Comments
(wait I don't even have twitter whoops lol)
Anyhow, got all four crystals, and Team "Hit them till they die" is fully operational. Monk/Berserker/Beastmaster/Dragoon. Faris is my MVP at this point in time, since she has some amazing captures.
It's fun. We're both Mordecai, with my suit of course being baby blue because REASONS. We got to level 7 so far, just did that one mission with the seeds for TK Baha. T'was stressful but successful.
He plays with his snoipah roifle and a shotgun, primarily. I tend to go for an SMG I bought early on and more recently a pistol named The Clipper that sets things on fire randomly. So much fun.
Meysell Quintana said it best: "This means the Xbox One is slightly more viable but still way too f--kin' expensive."
Meanwhile, I'm here laughing at the faux pas that was E3 for them and I can't help but wonder if now they'll try to integrate these methods in different ways.
i get so angry sometimes i just punch plankton --Klinotaxis
Guessing this will save the system from being a complete failure, though I'd imagine they've still given up much of their initial sales to Sony.
Interesting. I was wondering if they'd relent at some point or ride thins thing until it buried them. I thought they might wait until after launch and poor sales to take action, but this was a wiser decision.
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
i will pimp this series until death or discontinuation do us part
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
In order to get the cards, you need to play the games that they belong to. The amount of time you spend in the game dictates the number of cards that drop. In games where micro-transactions are allowed (i.e. Team Fortress 2, which is one of Steam's biggest cash cows), buying things in the game increases the number of drops that you get.
If you get all the cards for a game, you can convert them into a badge that can earn you emoticons, profile backgrounds or coupons. But it's impossible to get all the cards for a certain set through drops alone (and you might get two of the same card, which makes things even harder). So, you end up trading things (and eventually buying things) on the Steam Community Market (which apparently has existed for a while and I just never knew about it). And Steam skims a bit of money off the top for every transaction.
They made a game out of purchasing novelty items and coupon-clipping. It's evil, evil genius.