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- Jan 28, 2011
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lolwut
As for the list itself? I love it, I wish there were more lists like it. One list for shoddy console ports, another for games that don't allow for customizable controls, etc.
No, that's what happens when irresponsible devs are allowed to interfere with God's golden framerate.Is 30fps why some games don't feel "smooth" and make me feel a little motion sick?
Wouldn't it then only be a matter of time that curation lists would be defanged like the custom tag system?
When they exported criminals to Australia in the 1800s, the Brits couldn't know what they'd started. Crime was a genetic certainty, and Australian youths were taught the finer points of maiming and slaughter at their mother’s breasts. Unfortunately, a lifetime spent intoxicated meant that Australian criminals didn’t succeed as well as their international rivals. The Tao easily established a foothold in Australasia and a lifetime of saki and sushi looked imminent. Then, in the Great Lager Rebellion of 2140, there was an uprising led by the Tasmanian Liberation Consortium. From their hydro-electric power-generating island base they cut off the electricity to the mainland, stunning Tao executives who could no longer operate their game consoles. They surged across the Bass Strait like beer from a barrel and drove the Tao from Australia to re-established the Barby as the Australian national pastime.
With a fortune made from exporting weak, fizzy lager worldwide to spend on Research, the TLC gained influence and were soon second only to the Tao itself as a world power. Their agents tend to be wayward in their aim, mainly because their executive controllers are always drunk, so civilian casualties are high. But TLC agents have no real sadistic streak, and only turn nasty when denied access to Vegemite.
By 2100 the European Community was suffering internal breakdown. The novel idea of compartmentalizing European affairs – with Belgium responsible for entertainment, Italy for defense, and Britain the continent’s cuisine – was a nightmare scenario and trouble was inevitable. Centuries-old national rivalries could not be put aside and the Germans were (to use the diplomatic language of the time) ‘putting down their beach towels’ on every sun lounger in Europe. In this atmosphere of mutual distrust and aggression the CHIP was perfected. It kept the populous occupied while, in the background, competing governments fell to corporate interests and the Syndicates moved in. When the dust had settled only EuroCorp remained. But EuroCorp’s monopoly of world CHIP production couldn’t last forever, and soon the executive was defending itself from rival Syndicate interests on all fronts.
Well, curator system so far has been e-celebs listing games, but if for example Codex curated list of "banalshitboring decline" or the like gain traction, then I'm pretty sure that Steam would change curator TOS to prohibit "malicious" lists.
Even if that did come to pass I don't really see Valve doing anything drastic to limit it. So long as they keep relatively civil about it (i.e. not accusing, say, Todd Howard of being a sheep rapist), I can't see negative reviews being construed in any reasonable way as being malicious. I'd think the negative PR alone from pulling something like that would stop Valve from seriously considering it.Well, curator system so far has been e-celebs listing games, but if for example Codex curated list of "banalshitboring decline" or the like gain traction, then I'm pretty sure that Steam would change curator TOS to prohibit "malicious" lists.
Even if that did come to pass I don't really see Valve doing anything drastic to limit it. So long as they keep relatively civil about it (i.e. not accusing, say, Todd Howard of being a sheep rapist), I don't really see negative reviews being construed in any reasonable way as being malicious. I'd think the negative PR alone from pulling something like that would stop Valve from seriously considering it.
Yeah, weird that something as basic as an option to ignore specific curator is missing.I wish you could ignore Curator lists though, I hate that they shove RPS with their pretentious und unfunny "PC gaming since 18hundredsomething" in my face every day.
Somewhere between finishing Mass Effect 3 for the first time in June 2014 and now, something happened to me. If it didn’t sound so sinister, I would describe it as akin to an indoctrination; suddenly, almost so quickly it barely registered, I had the Spectre logo permanently inked on my body. I was writing chapters for gaming books about BioWare. I was appearing on Dragon Age podcasts. The majority of my online friends spent their time tweeting about the in-game romances they were having. I was rooming at Emerald City Comicon with a girl I’d met through Instagram by searching #MassEffectTattoos.
I had become, as so much of the fandom self-identifies, 100% BioWare trash.
I’ve felt particularly enthralled by the way their games pay special attention to deep female friendships, something often ignored in most games (a consequence of featuring only token female characters).
With Dragon Age: Inquisition (BioWare’s most successful launch ever), the game featured gender-neutral box art; developers ensured gender balance in background characters; a major supporting character is a trans person; when you stand around the War Table as a female Inquisitor, making big, game-changing decisions, you stand with three other women and only one man. And, of course, there’s the variety of romance options available to any player, allowing you to enter into relationships with characters from every corner of the LGBTQ+ spectrum.
haha“The more recent crop of romances makes BioWare games resonate with me like nothing else,” said Becky Chambers, author of the upcoming book The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet and my fangirl mentor in the world of Mass Effect (she was the first to tell me that this intense obsession I was feeling was completely normal). “Shepard and Liara’s relationship was, honest to God, the first time I'd ever seen SF/F with a fully-fledged, trilogy-spanning love story between two women. That meant the world to me, because it's so incredibly rare elsewhere.”