The Return of Testing Chat Thread
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- Fuckin' New Guy
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Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
We can still loot them. Its the principle of the thing, dammit
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- Not a Brony (Probably lol)
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Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
You're one of those people who steals every glass or plate in Elder Scrolls, aren't you.
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- Fuckin' New Guy
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Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
I might be if I'd ever played an Elder Scrolls game. I've had Morrowind sitting in some chest where I stored all my old computer games, but for one reason or another I never quite got around to playing it, or Oblivion, or Skyfall. Maybe one of these days.
I shall take the dishware theft under advisement. In the meantime I will continue watching the bloodbath and calculate ways I shall profit.
I shall take the dishware theft under advisement. In the meantime I will continue watching the bloodbath and calculate ways I shall profit.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
Man, I've been conditioned by twenty years of RPGs to pick up everything. I even collect plates and cups to give to Muggy in F:NV, so I can then sell the stuff he makes out of it. It's pretty ridiculous.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
It's "Skyrim". I don't think I've ever seen James Bond in these games, but considering I've never really played them what do I know ?Glass Fort MacLeod wrote:Skyfall
Aaron : for me that's the reverse, saving space / weight for the interesting loot or my own equipment ; so much that I often don't collect rifles and semi-valuable things like that, and end up with a dozen weapon and their munitions I carry around - I'm always at max weight with the ammo alone.
No.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
you can take the testingstani out of the teo but apparently you can't take the teo out of the testingstani
DracuLax - when even Death can't scare the shit out of you
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
So it would seem.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
Honestly, I think Skyrim would probably be a whole lot more interesting if James Bond were in it. Certainly it couldn't really be any less interesting than it already is, and anything that involves an Aston Martin in a chase scene with a dragon would be a more worthwhile investment than playing an ex-convict who wanders around and shouts at people.Oxymoron wrote:It's "Skyrim". I don't think I've ever seen James Bond in these games, but considering I've never really played them what do I know ?
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
I never played Morrowind, but I can tell you that I wasted hours of my life on Oblivion before I came to the stunning realisation that it was crap and that I couldn't get those hours back.Glass Fort MacLeod wrote:I might be if I'd ever played an Elder Scrolls game. I've had Morrowind sitting in some chest where I stored all my old computer games, but for one reason or another I never quite got around to playing it, or Oblivion, or Skyfall. Maybe one of these days.
The Elder Scrolls is one of the most boring, bland and poorly designed computer RPGs ever released, and people losing their shit over it baffles me.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
The major thing about the Elder Scrolls games is that they do have two major redeeming features. The first is that they often present an open, sprawling world map to explore. The second is that they have a decent soundtrack, provided for the past three games by the immensely talented Jeremy Soule, and this is always by far the best feature of the game.
However, literally everything else about those games tends to be utterly horrible. The art design is laughable, the scenery is okay but actual characters look terrible, the artificial intelligence barely exists, even major boss fights are often ludicrously easy, the combat itself scarcely exists except as click-til-it-dies, and each subsequent game strips more and more actual complexity and choice from the game itself. To the point that the latest title is arguably just an action game with roleplaying elements rather than an actual roleplaying game, really. And it sort of undercuts the exploration angle when there's nothing even remotely worthwhile to be found.
And to top it all off, the storylines in these games are basically nonexistent. I doubt anyone would remember much more about Oblivion than the assassin quests, and the fact that the opening was narrated by Emperor Jean-Luc Picard.
However, literally everything else about those games tends to be utterly horrible. The art design is laughable, the scenery is okay but actual characters look terrible, the artificial intelligence barely exists, even major boss fights are often ludicrously easy, the combat itself scarcely exists except as click-til-it-dies, and each subsequent game strips more and more actual complexity and choice from the game itself. To the point that the latest title is arguably just an action game with roleplaying elements rather than an actual roleplaying game, really. And it sort of undercuts the exploration angle when there's nothing even remotely worthwhile to be found.
And to top it all off, the storylines in these games are basically nonexistent. I doubt anyone would remember much more about Oblivion than the assassin quests, and the fact that the opening was narrated by Emperor Jean-Luc Picard.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
Skyrim looked great, from a distance and only the ground.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
I'm sure someone could mod it in. You've already got machoman and MLP mods.Sandman wrote:Honestly, I think Skyrim would probably be a whole lot more interesting if James Bond were in it. Certainly it couldn't really be any less interesting than it already is, and anything that involves an Aston Martin in a chase scene with a dragon would be a more worthwhile investment than playing an ex-convict who wanders around and shouts at people.Oxymoron wrote:It's "Skyrim". I don't think I've ever seen James Bond in these games, but considering I've never really played them what do I know ?
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
So, today I added another mark on the list of why in case of nuclear war I wouldn't survive.
What I already knew : first, the whole city is a giant pit of R&D with world class scientific instrument (biggest synchrotron in the world, biggest source of neutron for scientific use in the world, etc...). Then, less than ten kilometres from the city centre are big chemical plants - a strategic industry in wartime that could be converted to produce explosives and such. Moreover, between 20 and 40 kilometres upstream the river going in the middle of my city, are a score of big hydroelectric dams producing roughly a third to a half of France's hydroelectricity - in case of war, the whole valley would likely be submerged by a tsunami of boiling radioactive water.
This, is what I already knew.
Well, today I learned that my city is also one of the few places in the world (which can be numbered on the fingers of one hand) which has the industrial infrastructure to mass-produce complex microelectronic systems such as microprocessors and other products of vital importance for the industry of our modern world.
Basically, in case of war the whole region is going to be carpet bombed, be it with conventional or nuclear explosives.
Oh well. Not as if it had even the littlest chance of ever happening. Still, I find it's fun to know I live pretty much in the centre of a giant bullseye on a nuclear targeting map.
What I already knew : first, the whole city is a giant pit of R&D with world class scientific instrument (biggest synchrotron in the world, biggest source of neutron for scientific use in the world, etc...). Then, less than ten kilometres from the city centre are big chemical plants - a strategic industry in wartime that could be converted to produce explosives and such. Moreover, between 20 and 40 kilometres upstream the river going in the middle of my city, are a score of big hydroelectric dams producing roughly a third to a half of France's hydroelectricity - in case of war, the whole valley would likely be submerged by a tsunami of boiling radioactive water.
This, is what I already knew.
Well, today I learned that my city is also one of the few places in the world (which can be numbered on the fingers of one hand) which has the industrial infrastructure to mass-produce complex microelectronic systems such as microprocessors and other products of vital importance for the industry of our modern world.
Basically, in case of war the whole region is going to be carpet bombed, be it with conventional or nuclear explosives.
Oh well. Not as if it had even the littlest chance of ever happening. Still, I find it's fun to know I live pretty much in the centre of a giant bullseye on a nuclear targeting map.
No.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
Look at it this way; you're probably better off than New York.Oxymoron wrote:So, today I added another mark on the list of why in case of nuclear war I wouldn't survive.
What I already knew : first, the whole city is a giant pit of R&D with world class scientific instrument (biggest synchrotron in the world, biggest source of neutron for scientific use in the world, etc...). Then, less than ten kilometres from the city centre are big chemical plants - a strategic industry in wartime that could be converted to produce explosives and such. Moreover, between 20 and 40 kilometres upstream the river going in the middle of my city, are a score of big hydroelectric dams producing roughly a third to a half of France's hydroelectricity - in case of war, the whole valley would likely be submerged by a tsunami of boiling radioactive water.
This, is what I already knew.
Well, today I learned that my city is also one of the few places in the world (which can be numbered on the fingers of one hand) which has the industrial infrastructure to mass-produce complex microelectronic systems such as microprocessors and other products of vital importance for the industry of our modern world.
Basically, in case of war the whole region is going to be carpet bombed, be it with conventional or nuclear explosives.
Oh well. Not as if it had even the littlest chance of ever happening. Still, I find it's fun to know I live pretty much in the centre of a giant bullseye on a nuclear targeting map.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
Where abouts are you?
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I hadn't noticed.
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
why isn't there an S on the back of his cape?
why
why
why
why
why
why
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- Posts: 1456
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Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
i live nearby us stratcom do i win the totally fucked award
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- Battering Ram of Love
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Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
I live a couple towns away from an airport with a particularly long runway. That's the best I got unless suddenly trees and bears become vital targets.
- RyanThunder
- Knows Best
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Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
I live in Toronto, Canada, which means I get to deal with all the fallout from New York and Washington and the mid-US missile bases.
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I live less than 10 miles from where a Nuclear Warship is docked. Yay me!
Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
I live an hour from ground zero. Before that I had NORAD in Colorado. Yay me?
- Agent Bert Macklin
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Re: The Return of Testing Chat Thread
I'd like to go to ground zero and have a Crohn's shit on it.Zod wrote:I live an hour from ground zero. Before that I had NORAD in Colorado. Yay me?