How come Street Fighter V is allowed a "pre-review" without a score? It has officially launched minus a bunch of promised features. Don't understand why it gets a free pass to improve over the next month while other games are held to a different standard at launch.
By the way, since they don't do Time Stamps: Skip to Fifty Six Minutes (56:00) in if you want to get past all the SF V discussion.
Because if we had scored the game on Monday morning, the online part of the review would basically read "runs great, servers work, awesome dawg let's fight." It has nothing to do with features, it has everything to do with the way the game performs in a real, retail environment.
As if the hyperbolic interview and quick look weren't enough, we have 45 minutes only about The Witness. We all saw it coming too. And I cosign @codedred's comment.
Holy fucking shit Jeff sounds like the most ignorant fool in the world talking about Making a Murderer. And the takeaway of "we need more vigilante justice"... These guys should stick to video games. Good lord.
If the thing you took away from that conversation was that I was seriously talking about vigilante justice as an option then maybe you should try paying attention to the show instead of just having it on in the background or something.
@jeff: I guess the good news is you have my full name and address in the event that you want to sue my ass for stealing your review scores. :)
Full disclosure: I work at a phone place. I got the phone from LG for free. I prefer Apple stuff, so I didn't want it. Thought it would be fun to send to you guys.
Feel free to give it to Lang so my custom firmware can get to the bottom of all this Iron Galaxy crap.
OF COURSE YOU WOULD SAY THAT
(Actually, if I had a tiny pin or proper SIM tray opener around here, I probably would have already tried it out.)
It sort of bums me out (even if it's really just a bit at this point) that Android is perpetually presented as absolute trash in all GB content. Stock android, as it appears on Nexus phones, is just as clean and functional as iOS.
That's the issue, though. As an Android user, I'm loving my Nexus 5 and Marshmallow, but the market is riddled with a bunch of shit and weird OEM stuff that fucks with everything.
As much as I enjoy Android, I can't blame the duders for not being a fan of it. It's still a weird place that's starting to get somewhere nice, but it's been long road.
The whole point of what I was saying is that by sending us a used phone, the guy could have put any number of nefarious things onto that phone via custom firmware. I'm not saying anything at all about Android phones. Just that a used phone from an unknown source might not be safe.
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