Much like Yu-Gi-Oh! And Cartoon Network Batman, “Can’t Kill Anybody” just invites much worse possibilities
Much like Yu-Gi-Oh! And Cartoon Network Batman, “Can’t Kill Anybody” just invites much worse possibilities


Not OP but I loved Visions, not worrying about canon really freed them up to tell good stories


It looks wide enough for a billboard to me
The West Wing had a segment with some kids arguing for suffrage, and it convinced me. Everyone else I’ve talked to, however…
It’s possible to think both “these people deserve to have their fingernails removed” and “a just society cannot inflict cruel punishment”


Between friendly nations, it’s more of an ‘Oh, you!’ if noone was harmed


And technology goes one step further over my head


What comparable systems?


That is how a defensive alliance works, yes


PC performance was awful. I was really looking forward to it, but it ran at about 5 frames per second so I refunded it


The northern hemisphere has more land, so I would guess that affects how much sunlight gets absorbed


“Nothing is ever good enough for me”


Are US prisoners risking their lives to tell the world what’s happening to them?


In other souls games, that stutter was caused by invaders connecting to your session. It throws me off every time it happens in Elden Ring for some other reason


Bless them for it


What in the hell are you talking about? Microchips are the most advanced technology in production and you think slaves are assembling them? And what, you just assume that anything not produced in the United States is produced by slave labor?


That’s true, but the comments are valid when talking about Bethesda games


For that much drive space, I could have the entire despecialized Star Wars trilogy in 4k


Won’t be any change this time around
Get out of here with that defeatest attitude. Labor fought hard to get a 5 day - 40 hour standard workweek, you can do so too
I’d wager your method is much more traditional, the average French housewife isn’t going to put as much effort into a dish as the professional chefs who wrote the cookbooks