The N64 could have kept blood on the floor if the developer wanted too, it's just that those resources are better spent elsewhere. Better graphics in several areas > seeing a pile of blood stay for the split second that you'd notice it.
Danalys said:could lead to intresting game play like tracking down an injured foe.
Mentok said:That 'Door' still gives me nightmares![]()

THWIP* said:YOU'RE A BIGGER ***** THAN THE DOOR.![]()
LongDong said:Stop picking on the Thunda from Down Unda!!! You know they lost their national hero recently!!
t: 
THWIP* said:MORE LIKE "S**T-PACK FROM THE OUTBACK".t:
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THWIP* said:MORE LIKE "SIXPACK FROM THE OUTBACK".t:
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Danalys said:who are you to dictate the rules of giant energy weapons. ever see a laser light the environment around it?
Danalys said:it's the glow of the device that produces the laser light not the laser light itself. all your pics are taking artistic licence.![]()
Fenrir said:Pardon me, but isn't the third pic on the right depicting the same thing as Mentok's pictures did? You can clearly see the laser beam and the light emission around it.![]()

Danalys said:it's the glow of the device that produces the laser light not the laser light itself. all your pics are taking artistic licence.![]()

look at the area between the dot and the emitter, there is no laser light hitting anything but the dot.A HeNe laser demonstration at the Kastler-Brossel Laboratory at Univ. Paris 6. The glowing ray in the middle is an electric discharge producing light in much the same way as a neon light; though it is the gain medium through which the laser passes, it is not the laser beam itself which is visible there. The laser beam crosses the air and marks a red point on the screen to the right.
Danalys said:![]()
look at the area between the dot and the emitter, there is no laser light hitting anything but the dot.