0 Followers
0 Following
1 Posts
Someone else has broken down a lot of examples, but in the broader sense, around half of states, a little more IIRC, have an age of consent of 16. The reason 18 is so well known is that’s the age of consent where so much of our media is made, California.
Strange my Galaxy defaul has several alternate t options, /þťțţ. Þþ for thorn and Đđ for eth, though when handwritten lowercase eth is usually ð. The buzzing vs breathy sound is called voiced or unvoiced, respectively.
Generally it’s used for both voiced and voiceless forms by hipsters and most of its historical use. There was a relatively short time eth was used for voiced th in English, but they became interchangeable for either sound quickly, and then eth fell out of use.
Long press T. But if you want to be a real hipster use eth instead by ling pressing D. Way, way back when, in English one was used for the sound in that, and one was used for the sound in thing. Pretty quickly they became interchangeable, and eth totally fell out of use. But if people want to bring one back, I say use them both.
IIRC, it doesn’t actually pay the game itself. We prod the cells, they fire in a certain way and that response is read to convert it to an output for the game. The cells aren’t a rudimentary Doom bot, they’re the controller.
Too be fair, TGA doesn’t seem to have historically given a lot of weight to the last spot. And they probably should, because of the public perception of the last spot being inherently prestigious. But it doesn’t seem like they were trying to say it’s some sort of capstone or anything. By all accounts he just thought it looked neat and threw it in the last open spot.
From some interviews, it sounds like it was just an ambitious mess that didn’t have good testers. IIRC, they said something about everyone pitching 5 ideas every day, and added a couple each time. And it really shows, it is some kind of franken-monster that combines all kinds of ideas that make a patchwork of meh. And then the testers they had either all worked on the game, or were friends with those that did, and nobody wanted to be a downer so they always gave positive feedback.
No he doesn’t? He gets sidelined for a while, which he doesn’t fight because he’s dostracted. Never gets sued. The second movie starts with a hearing where the gov is trying to acquire his new weapons, but it’s not a lawsuit and has nothing to do with the company.
Honestly though, I agree with him. WWW definitely is the safer bet on paper. But safer doesn’t mean foolproof, and the risky ventures sometimes are the most profitable. Making the worse move doesn’t necessarily mean you made the incorrect one.
There is a common myth that they were in dire straights and named it such because if It failed it would end the company. The truth is, they wanted to name it Fighting Fantasy, but that was already taken. Wanting to keep the alliteration, they changed to Final Fantasy, without a significant meaning attached to the title.