Big_w_powah
Trakanon Raider
- 1,887
- 750
I saw that shit in the movie theaters as a kid.Aladdin was madeover twenty years ago.The 'kids' who watched it are late-twenties/early thirties now.
I saw that shit in the movie theaters as a kid.Aladdin was madeover twenty years ago.The 'kids' who watched it are late-twenties/early thirties now.
Same.I saw that shit in the movie theaters as a kid.
You will note the use of past tense in my previous post. I am not calling 30 year olds 'kids' but you were kids when the rise of that art style began. I'm also not singling out Aladdin as you'll notice since I also mentioned Pixar and their movies.The only people who call thirty year olds 'kids' are old fuckers who need to hurry up and die, though.
29ers. High five before we become decrepit 30-year-old brittle bones. Aladdin is awesome and I'll make Apu when the monkey race is unveiled.Same.
29 years old.
Same here; Back when you had to actually go somewhere to see movies, I saw it 50-something times in the theater, over 4 releases and re-releases in the original '77-'81 runs.Whippersnappers talking about seeing Aladdin in the theaters.
A New Hope in the theaters at the age of 5 in 77 here.
The monkeys name was Abu, not Apu. Fucking 29er's.29ers. High five before we become decrepit 30-year-old brittle bones. Aladdin is awesome and I'll make Apu when the monkey race is unveiled.
Fuck, I grew up with internet. My first modem was a 2800 internal piece of shit that took an hour or more to download small plain text documents, text damn it!I'm impressed you guys can Internet.
Is your baudy ready?Fuck, I grew up with internet. My first modem was a 2800 internal piece of shit that took an hour or more to download small plain text documents, text damn it!
And yeah, I'll be 40 in a couple months
I'm not asking to recreate some feeling that was a fun one from 99.Disclaimer:
No video game is going to change your life, make your brights brighter, or add any intrinsic value to your existence in any way. They are empty calories. Games should be fun and distracting. If you are looking at any video game (even eq) as a life altering experience, you are doing life wrong.
Eq was launched at the cusp of the digital age. It was a pure social network platform before Facebook or twitter or the explosion of interconnectivity. It was never the game play, it was interaction with other human beings in a way never experienced.
This game will probably be fun, I'll prolly play it for a year or two in my free time. Is it reasonable for any game to expect or try for more?
Step back people. No, this game will not be able to turn back time and erase your experiences to make it all fresh. Live with it.
Thomas Keller, a chef, says he aims to recreate that first bite of great meal and extend that over four hours when you eat at his restaurants. But its an illusion. Our lives are frustratingly transitory... you are waisting your time trying to relive what can never be repeated. Approach EQ as something uniquely new and not what something else was and you will appreciate it, or not, for what it is.
QFT.Disclaimer:
No video game is going to change your life, make your brights brighter, or add any intrinsic value to your existence in any way. They are empty calories. Games should be fun and distracting. If you are looking at any video game (even eq) as a life altering experience, you are doing life wrong.
Eq was launched at the cusp of the digital age. It was a pure social network platform before Facebook or twitter or the explosion of interconnectivity. It was never the game play, it was interaction with other human beings in a way never experienced.
This game will probably be fun, I'll prolly play it for a year or two in my free time. Is it reasonable for any game to expect or try for more?
Step back people. No, this game will not be able to turn back time and erase your experiences to make it all fresh. Live with it.
Thomas Keller, a chef, says he aims to recreate that first bite of great meal and extend that over four hours when you eat at his restaurants. But its an illusion. Our lives are frustratingly transitory... you are waisting your time trying to relive what can never be repeated. Approach EQ as something uniquely new and not what something else was and you will appreciate it, or not, for what it is.