Some games yeah.
The game pictured in this comic, the Crash series on PS1, aged like fine wine though.
Some games yeah.
The game pictured in this comic, the Crash series on PS1, aged like fine wine though.
Right, the spoken french could be written more or less as Kès-ke-cè.
What are those cyclists having accidents with? Magical monoliths that appear out of nowhere or... cars?
While cycling in Tokyo, you either zigzag through convoluted residential street, risk it on large avenues with sharrows or annoy pedestrians by riding on sidewalks. This is not sustainable, something has to give.
I'm thinking we should fund a group tour for every Canadian mayor to go to Oulu in winter just to experience that.
Well, it makes me think that AI training was probably biased towards legal drivel like this, since it's public facing, professional and likely even translated in multiple languages.
The student got so good that people think the teacher is imitating it.
How can they let companies file such broad, vague patents for mechanics that have existed since forever? For example, 20240286040, is just what flying mounts have done in WoW since 2007 or even the flying cap in Mario 64 ffs. There are probably other earlier examples, but it goes to show that it's just noise to monopolize innovation and scare other devs.
That's some Tauros-shit (sue me). I hope the Japanese legal system can see that.
For me, the launchers are sometimes the only thing that worked while trying Linux the other day.
More like hydrogen-7.
US: spend more on defence
Canada:
US: not like this!
Is there a Chinese customer protection law influencing this or is this a marketing stunt? Good for them if it's the former.
Oh you're right, I forgot about this one. As a PS1 household, we liked it as kids without Mario games.
I should play it again to see, and I would need to play it with other people to judge it appropriately, unlike the comic.