Upset Spideyfan
Look on the bright side
- Joined
 - Dec 3, 2005
 
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Good riddance to the Dual Shock. I've never liked it. Since the PS1, that controller was always something I tolerated rather than enjoyed it.
	Good riddance to the Dual Shock. I've never liked it. Since the PS1, that controller was always something I tolerated rather than enjoyed it.
	
I didn't even realize there was a sales ban
I may be corrected when saying this, but I think hardcore fanboy gamers are some of the whiniest people, especially when you look at gaming comments on websites and forums. If a game in done in a slightly different style, they complain (like ME2 or Splinter Cell Conviction). When a game in the same style, like COD games, they complain.
Enjoyed that. I like your writing style. Pretty much agree with everything you said there. (couldn't see the pictures for some reason)https://wolvieboy.wordpress.com/2013/01/30/co-operaaaaation-working-together/
Article I wrote about co-op games. I reckon we should have a designated 'co-op Lounge'. Would that be a crazy idea to start a thread for that?
Video Games Are A Bigger Problem Than Guns, Says Actual U.S. Senator
[YT]JuiDBr0WnZU[/YT]
On MSNBC today, U.S. senator Lamar Alexander (a Tennessee Republican) set a new benchmark for insanity by claiming that games are worse than guns.
"I think video games is a bigger problem than guns, because video games affect people," he told host Chuck Todd.
Once again, this is an actual U.S. senator. An actual senator from the United States. That was elected to an office. This is a person who has a significant amount of power in this country, and he believes that video games are a bigger problem than guns.
This is a good time to remind everyone that there is no scientific evidence linking video games to violence.

"Gamers have got to just quiet down," Yee, D-San Francisco, said in an interview Tuesday. "Gamers have no credibility in this argument. This is all about their lust for violence and the industry's lust for money. This is a billion-dollar industry. This is about their self-interest."
Sen. Christopher Murphy D-Conn.
“I think there’s a question as to whether he would have driven in his mother’s car in the first place if he didn’t have access to a weapon that he saw in video games that gave him a false sense of courage about what he could do that day.”
