I think Vinny and Alex are great together and I've loved their videos. Maybe some day they'll need a third dude just for the sake of variety, and it'd be nice if they got some of the more high profile games, but for the time being I'm still totally excited when I notice that they've put up something new.
This is off topic, but while there's a bunch of Lord of The Rings people around someone should explain what the distinction is between Goblins, Orcs, and Uruk Hai, because I always found this very confusing. Also I remember they mentioned something about half-man orcs in the books or something like that, are those a whole other thing, or one of those 3 things?
I have very little appreciation for extreme difficulty in games, and most of the totally legal roms I own are for older stuff, when games were a lot more difficult. So I usually end up using save states pretty liberally, if only to save myself some time. I do place certain restrictions. For example when I was playing my totally legitimate and absolutely not criminally obtained copy of Mega Man X earlier this year, I would save before a boss, but I wouldn't save during a boss fight when I was doing well, even though that would've made the game a lot easier.
@raven10: You have exaggerated and misrepresented both the legislation and the mindset of Arizona and its citizens. You can't just pull someone over for being Latino. That's never what that law was, and anyone whose ever been in Arizona knows how ridiculous that idea is, because if cops were going to pull over every Latino they saw, they'd be pulling over 1 in every 4 people (or 1 in every 3 where I'm from). There's also a pretty good chance the cop doing it would be Latino as well.
While I'm sort of inclined to agree that SB 1070 encourages racial profiling to a certain extent (because there aren't many White immigrants knocking on Arizona's door), it's more likely they'd ask for papers because of the language someone speaks than because of their ethnicity. And in the end all the law really allowed was for law enforcement to check immigration status when someone is already lawfully stopped for another reason. Not something I agree with, but its certainly not the radical Naziesque policy you're portraying it as.
Also while Arizona is usually considered a pretty red state, big chunks of it consistently vote blue, including Tucson which is the second most populous city in the state.
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