As if police actually exist to prevent crimes.
As if police actually exist to prevent crimes.
Then later they do big hiring sprees as part of investing in making bigger games, and stocks rise.
I mean, modern applications don’t even give you an error more often than not.
The S is very popular in the rest of the world precisely because of its cheap price and gamepass.
Exchange students and descendants of immigrants are a thing you know.
Being a marketplace for other people’s games would probably be classified as a different type of income, specially if steam sells software that’s not games (which it does).
Battle passes, lootboxes, keys and whatnot.
Has to be. There’s no way the owners of the biggest storefront for pc gaming makes as much as EA.
And what, pray tell, will change?
This is exactly my problem. Downloading music (even crappy mp3) is basically impossible if you are not in the right, sometimes paid, tracker. In a way, copyright holders actually won their war against piracy.
Even MMOs tend to be terrible live service games. This mode necessitates a good cadence of content (actual content, not stuff to buy) that most studios seem incapable of doing.
Starfield at least lets me have some fun on foot. Elite built their ground component in a very punishing way that made it very annoying to deal with.
As to be expected. There will probably also be an xbox version eventually.
Have the devs explained if this is going to be a grind-a-ton like warframe?
I mean, most of the people that made those great games don’t work there anymore.
I have about 4500h of FFXIV, which is basically nothing in terms of mmos.
Why would he end the operation?
Extended warranties. Most defects are noticed during the first month of use, which is usually already covered by law.
Also many types of insurance, though mostly because actually getting it in case you need is a nightmare.
I can understand wanting to keep certain versions of games available for posterity, but this is just an upgrade to csgo, hardly anything they haven’t shown will change.
Dividing NATO’s resources on another front is a very likely strategy. It could also just be that, with their stockpiles depleted, the Palestinians decided it was a good moment to strike.