This was the most manly and honest documentary I've ever watched!
This was the most manly and honest documentary I've ever watched!
Life often throws in a lot for us to juggle. I find that as I've branched out more on the internet it becomes increasingly difficult to keep in contact with everyone I care about. In lu of this, I'm not one to judge. Glad you took the time to blog and give us a shout out,mate!
The problem is "ignorant" in a pseudo modern SJW's eyes is simply disagreeing with them even if you have proof and evidence. And the whole "guilt trip" they try to put onto "privileged white cis males" is rather ludicrous considering these very same people are often from upper middle class suburbs or posh universities. It would be like me telling you to "check your privilege" while I'm drinking from a silver ruby encrusted chalice.
Ironically most of my friends from stereotypical oppressed minorities do not even attack me for being white. I get the most flak from other deluded white people.
I just read the title and agreed instantly without reading the blog. lol. Then I read the blog and I was like "Dayum,I'm sorry you come across these people,Blake. Have a beer and a bro-fist on me!'
I feel you,bro. I spend a lot of time on youtube and some of the responses there make me regret being human. We already discussed the scum and villainy I encountered while talking about Felicia Garcia's tragic suicide and I'm pretty much convinced "crazy bigotry" is the new emperor's clothes right now. A lot of people who think they are "SJW activists" on all sides of the spectrum are not so much about love & acceptance as much as they are about finding new scapegoats to blame all their problems on.
Yeah,once you get accustomed to all the little nuances in the combat it becomes addictive as hell! Certain people seem to not be fond of the fact you drink potions prior to battle but making potions and strategically drinking them before fights is a feature I ended up being very fond of!
Ah, I'll end up snatching it,Blake! At this point I own the other two Bioshocks and though they didn't exactly beckon me back for second playthrus they did manage to emotionally touch me in ways most other games have not. (I felt the same about Nier too. These are games that literally made me "cry". lol.)
I might like the boxing but cannot comment much on the others. (I love bowling but I prefer doing the real thing,heh.) In Birth By Sleep I've grown kind of fond of the racing mini game. It was better done than I thought it would be.
Personally I liked Bioshock II a tad more than the first one. Not by leaps and bounds but enough for my bias to exist. In a way Bioshock II was more of a tragic love story and I grew very attached to Eleanor. It was neat how Delta sort of got to live on through her.
Ha ha ha! You're son might be hinting at something there,Dan. lol. I'm none too subtle either.
But yeah,my money is tight so I prefer to pick up games that offer more in the longevity and re-play departments. It's my strategic way of making sure I get plenty of bang for my buck.
Heh,more or less that's how it comes off to me too,Chris. I'll still probably buy it and play it once but as I've already mentioned,it's not on my top list of things to do.
I really have enjoyed the Bioshock franchise for what it is and my first play-thrus are always memorable. My problem stems from the fact I usually don't feel much of an incentive to go back.