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TheWampaKing
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Do you jumprope with a giant worm made of Col. Sanders mustache?
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Nix
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Drewsov wrote:
Nix wrote:Do you still hate Oblivion, or are you giving it another chance? :?
Well, I haven't picked it up again... so what's that tell ya? ;)
haha, it tells me what I wanted to know. :lol:

Um. Okay... here's a hard one (possibly)... do you have a favorite book? Like, a story that just absolutely... touched you.
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Favorite type of meat?
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Drewsov
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TheWampaKing wrote:Do you jumprope with a giant worm made of Col. Sanders mustache?
Um. That's creepy. Just saying. XD
Nix wrote:
Drewsov wrote:
Nix wrote:Do you still hate Oblivion, or are you giving it another chance? :?
Well, I haven't picked it up again... so what's that tell ya? ;)
haha, it tells me what I wanted to know. :lol:

Um. Okay... here's a hard one (possibly)... do you have a favorite book? Like, a story that just absolutely... touched you.
Well, yeah, of course I do. Two books, actually, pretty much tie for first place... though I could likely list tons of books that really touched me. Those books are:

East of Eden--John Steinbeck: I absolutely love this book. It parallels the Book of Genesis in several pretty significant ways, but it also manages to grab the reader as a history of a two families in California as they grow and change. It's pretty amazing, and ultimately very tragic.

American Gods--Neil Gaiman: This one is a little weird... simply because I know I've read better books. But really, none have stuck with me like this one. I can't really tell you why I love this book... just that it seemed so profound to me at the time in a way that I couldn't quite grasp. I should pick it up again. ;)
http://exculpate.wordpress.com - Updated 2.10.12

You were telling him about Buddha, you were telling him about Mohammed in the same breath. You never mentioned one time the Man who came and died a criminal’s death...
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Drewsov
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Strider wrote:Favorite type of meat?
Um... buffalo?
http://exculpate.wordpress.com - Updated 2.10.12

You were telling him about Buddha, you were telling him about Mohammed in the same breath. You never mentioned one time the Man who came and died a criminal’s death...
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CountKrazy
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East of Eden--John Steinbeck: I absolutely love this book. It parallels the Book of Genesis in several pretty significant ways, but it also manages to grab the reader as a history of a two families in California as they grow and change. It's pretty amazing, and ultimately very tragic.
I adore that book. o_o
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Drewsov wrote:Well, yeah, of course I do. Two books, actually, pretty much tie for first place... though I could likely list tons of books that really touched me. Those books are:

East of Eden--John Steinbeck: I absolutely love this book. It parallels the Book of Genesis in several pretty significant ways, but it also manages to grab the reader as a history of a two families in California as they grow and change. It's pretty amazing, and ultimately very tragic.

American Gods--Neil Gaiman: This one is a little weird... simply because I know I've read better books. But really, none have stuck with me like this one. I can't really tell you why I love this book... just that it seemed so profound to me at the time in a way that I couldn't quite grasp. I should pick it up again. ;)
Interesting choices.

Have you ever read a book that you just never get tired of? As in, you could read it many, many, many times.
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"Kissaki Kai is not like fighting an opponent, it is an execution."
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Drewsov
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epsons wrote:The Flaming Lips?
Not a fan whatsoever.
Nix wrote:
Drewsov wrote:Well, yeah, of course I do. Two books, actually, pretty much tie for first place... though I could likely list tons of books that really touched me. Those books are:

East of Eden--John Steinbeck: I absolutely love this book. It parallels the Book of Genesis in several pretty significant ways, but it also manages to grab the reader as a history of a two families in California as they grow and change. It's pretty amazing, and ultimately very tragic.

American Gods--Neil Gaiman: This one is a little weird... simply because I know I've read better books. But really, none have stuck with me like this one. I can't really tell you why I love this book... just that it seemed so profound to me at the time in a way that I couldn't quite grasp. I should pick it up again. ;)
Interesting choices.

Have you ever read a book that you just never get tired of? As in, you could read it many, many, many times.
Hmm... I don't know. I don't tend to read books over because I have so many more to read. XD Last time I did that was in high school... and that book was I, Jedi. It was still good, but considerably underwhelming compared to what I had thought it to be in the past.
http://exculpate.wordpress.com - Updated 2.10.12

You were telling him about Buddha, you were telling him about Mohammed in the same breath. You never mentioned one time the Man who came and died a criminal’s death...
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hahaha, I know the feeling about a book being less than you thought it was. XD

Have you tried co-op on RE5 yet?
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"Kissaki Kai is not like fighting an opponent, it is an execution."
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Drewsov
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Nix wrote:hahaha, I know the feeling about a book being less than you thought it was. XD

Have you tried co-op on RE5 yet?
Yeah, a little. It's pretty fun. I'm hoping to try it online soon, since all I played was a bit of split screen.
http://exculpate.wordpress.com - Updated 2.10.12

You were telling him about Buddha, you were telling him about Mohammed in the same breath. You never mentioned one time the Man who came and died a criminal’s death...
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Ah, sweet.

How's it work as a split-screen game?
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"Kissaki Kai is not like fighting an opponent, it is an execution."
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Drewsov
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Nix wrote:Ah, sweet.

How's it work as a split-screen game?
You start as a single player game... and have the second player press start on their controller. A load screen pops up... and then you're put back into the game. Any treasures or money that you have go to each player, so you don't have to worry about money management as much with two people. ... Yeah, the game was absolutely designed for co-op.
http://exculpate.wordpress.com - Updated 2.10.12

You were telling him about Buddha, you were telling him about Mohammed in the same breath. You never mentioned one time the Man who came and died a criminal’s death...
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Would you consider that a good thing or a bad thing?
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Drewsov
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Chozon1 wrote:Would you consider that a good thing or a bad thing?
Um, for me, it tends to be more of a bad thing. I don't really like playing co-op games... or multiplayer games of any kind. And when the single player game has an AI controlled partner who doesn't do what she's supposed to... it gets more than a little frustrating. On the other hand, it was still the same solid game play that RE4 had... so it ended up evening out okay.
http://exculpate.wordpress.com - Updated 2.10.12

You were telling him about Buddha, you were telling him about Mohammed in the same breath. You never mentioned one time the Man who came and died a criminal’s death...
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