metadigital
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Everything posted by metadigital
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No..I checked it there also and it's a bunch of crap... The goths didn't remain here,they just spent a small period of time before moving twords the Roman Empire I can't belive they made such a msitake <{POST_SNAPBACK}> The quoted version doesn't disagree with your version; the ancient Romanian people were Thracian, then Rome (Emperor Trajan) came to town and killed that guy with the beard (he's on Trajan's column in Rome) and then Thrace became Dacia, then The Goths came in for a while before moving on to attack Rome. Now, the Goths, Visigoths and Vandalls sacked Rome in the fifth century, so the Goths were in Dacia from 270ACE to, say, 450ACE ?
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The media is a servant to ratings. They don't have a conscience; they have shareholders. A favourite trick in the societies I have lived in over the last couple of decades is to build someone up in the media, so that they can be cut down in a most delightfully tragic manner: perfect copy for the media as they feed the cult of celebrity with sensationalism on the way up and down. War is not a pleasant thing. But don't think that there isn't going to be a lot of it: you can't expect to sit at your computer sucking 300+ watts of coal fired power out of the grid whilst people in Egypt will be going to war with the people in Ethiopia because they want to damn the Blue Nile and cut off some of Egypt's water supply. The only way the West's "democracy" meme will survive is by leading by example. I see plenty of examples of hypocritical "do as I say" governments out there.
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I just made it harder for someone else. 30 Questions and I beat the black suited fetishist. *does little jig*
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Romanian... It's Romanian... Romanian comes from our Roman heritage... <{POST_SNAPBACK}> Not Dacian or Thracian, then. Because they was a bunch of pre-Christian heathens. Dacia: An ancient region and Roman province corresponding roughly to modern Romania. Inhabited before the Christian era by a people of Thracian stock with an advanced material culture, the region was abandoned to the Goths after A.D. 270.
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KotOR 3: Total Denial
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Okay, then definitely not EPROM. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> Is it in a static-insulated sleeve?
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We're talking about the Star Wars fantasy world here, I hope.
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My lovely Public School had us watch it when I was about nine years old. Basically just says people are nasty: very Hobbesian outlook: survival of the fittest. Artificially-created and extreme situations, where people are manipulated into behaving in a certain way. I'm not arguing about the fact that people can behave badly in some situations, but about whether this makes them evil people. Did the participants in these experiments, after they had finished, reflect on them and feel shock at how they had behaved? Moreover, Milgram's study is about authority and obedience, not directly about good and evil. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> My psychology text book ws written by one Philip Zimbardo. Even if you haven't done much (any) psychology, you will probably be familiar with his seminal thesis. In it he proves the power of the situation; he took a couple of dozen uni students (always good fodder) and had half be prisoners and half be guards. By the end of the week, the "guards" were treating the "prisoners" like dirt, and the "prisoners" were acting like victims. The students are still emotionally scarred when they are interviewed now, almost thirty years later. Needless to say this was one of the last experiments to use people without getting informed consent, which kinda defeats the purpose of most Psych tests. Anyway, back on the topic, Steve, you may want to believe everyone is good, but you are mistaken. I know for a fact, because I have met and dealt with people who are not good people. If you haven't met these people, either you haven't recognised them, or you have been extraordinarily lucky. You'll be rationalising the Chinese government's handling of Tianamen Square next. (While you're following that link, just peruse the Amnesty International site a bit; heck, I'll buy you a year's membership if it'll help you see.)
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But you like Celine Dion ...
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Who's going to break this to GL ?
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Just remember the budget the BBC gave the series was less than you spent on Friday night, don't go looking for special FX like Speilberg's War of the Worlds (I think there's a guy under a roll of bubblewrap in the Ark in Space ... ) Open your mind and think of the wonderful SF concepts ...
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I would say its more a geometric growth than an exponential one. Four classes equals four elements per puzzle, multiplied by the number of puzzles, equals three unknowns and one given element per puzzle. Geometric: four (or whatever the puzzle key length is) multiplied by the number of puzzles. the only way to make the game simpler (read: less effort) is to have simpler puzzles, which you can do with or without the added benefit of multiple classes, e.g. a single element puzzle like a fed-ex to gain a key for a door.
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can't argue with that.
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Stop the whole Exile + Raven fighting the Sith.
metadigital replied to MTJ's topic in Star Wars: General Discussion
I like the idea of influence. I do think it was poorly implemented in some ways but, if they can fix the difficulties, it should be fine. The problem with influence in K2 is that there was often only one person who had certain information...information that influence unlocked. Also, factor in the fact that influence was alignment-based (at least in part) and it is easy to see where the problem lies. Now granted, you did not absolutely need this information to complete the game, but it did help paint a more complete picture of what was going on. IMO, anything that deals with the main quest should not be unlocked by influence. Influence should be all about training, side quests and really surperfluous conversation. In a nutshell, the problem with influence as it is now is that it does not unlock enough stuff and what it does unlock should not be locked to begin with. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> As has been said (innumerable times) before, the influence system was poorly implented; it was used to hide plot, so that one had to replay the game in order to gain the hidden plot elements from others whom you had no influence over previously. That's crap. The poor influence implementation coupled with the poor NPC alignment implementation (Visas acting like a DS groupie with LS Mastery) was compounded by the limited and shoddy dialogue options -- especially for a DS PC: i.e. no subtle deception, just blatant frontal assault. -
Stop the whole Exile + Raven fighting the Sith.
metadigital replied to MTJ's topic in Star Wars: General Discussion
It's been a while since I had played Throne of Bhaal.....could you remind me? And I cannot think of many games (not even KOTOR 2) where you actually have an impact on the NPCs. They stay static...and even in KOTOR 2, they may be darkside but they still responded like their old selves. The ability to make influences on the NPCs is a great idea, since it provides a more plausible and dynamic experience. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> There is "reputation" in BG2, without the ToB. -
It is also feasible that you may choose to go solo. (Especially if not a Jedi, but neutral. Sith training is probably still through am apprenticeship, but not necessarily.)
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TSL Restoration Project: Work in Progress
metadigital replied to Aurora's topic in Star Wars: General Discussion
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Do they ever recover their balast equilibrium ? Or is that a euphemism for shuffle off this mortal coil.
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Naw, you need to watch the first season of Tom Baker -- that's the definitive stuff: real vintage. Robot to ease into the new characters, Ark in Space to set the futuristic mood, Sontaran Experiment to show Lawful Evil, Genesis of the Daleks for the origin of true evil, followed by Revenge of the Cybermen, for cold ruthless evil. Wow, what a set. Never been beaten.
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It was Trajan wot did it. The people were Thracian, before Trajan conquered it and called it Dacia, wasn't it?
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Well, the padawan is always with the Master, so if the padawan survives, then instant Masterhood. The only issue would be if the padawan were not with their Master at the time of death (off on a side quest, say) -- then, that would be a good hook for the plot. Maybe have to prove yourself ... <{POST_SNAPBACK}> What they could do is that your master is being held by <Insert next sith cult/sith wannabe faction> and you have been given an offer to join their ranks by killing your master, or you can save your master and remain on the lightside/neutral path <{POST_SNAPBACK}> Yes.
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Ecceston is very good. Too bad he's not staying for next season. Billy "Ferrari for a BJ" Piper is allegedly trying to crack Hollywood ( ) and so has also said she ain't staying. Launchie, there's another male companion now, who you might like better. (No more Daleks, though. ) Don't worry, that's one thing we all have in common: we all get old.
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Doctor Who is kewl. Doctors seven and eight suffered from some poor scripts, however, but Tom Baker rox. (I have his autograph somewhere ... :ph34r: )
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Peri? Nicola Bryant (Perpigelium, I think was her full name ... a bit like Romana's name: Romanatrelundur, or some such, iIrc).