The sad thing is, Hellgate London and Tabula Rasa both had a lot of potential and were almost great games - I haven't played APB, but it sounds like the same.. only it failed to live up to that potential that much more. (Hellgate and Tabula both seemed to get decent reviews instead of the horrid ones of APB).
And yet the methods of making nuclear bomb was leaked to everyone in practically no time at all. Relying on loyalty to America and a military oath as the main method of keeping a doomsday weapon's specifics secret obviously didn't work very well. IMHO the less people who can look up the precise details of making the absolute best nuclear bombs, the better - a secret shared is no secret at all, oath or no. Hell, it's too bad that the secret's already out, the best possible thing that could have happened is no one knowing how to make one any more. Now we need them for a deterrent at best or mutually assured destruction at worst.
From what I can tell from WoW experience, is that every time they change it, you have to re-accept it before you can enter the game. It's essentially saying that if they make a contract with a gaping loophole, you can't keep exploiting that loophole indefinately if they fix it - it's not a 'lifetime' contract in which it's iron clad for both sides.
Although he sounds stupid, "Dubya" had a measured IQ of 132. If you consider that stupid, then I tip my hat to your loft intelligence.
I think this just goes to show you just how useless IQ is as a statistic.
The sad thing is, Hellgate London and Tabula Rasa both had a lot of potential and were almost great games - I haven't played APB, but it sounds like the same.. only it failed to live up to that potential that much more. (Hellgate and Tabula both seemed to get decent reviews instead of the horrid ones of APB).
And yet the methods of making nuclear bomb was leaked to everyone in practically no time at all. Relying on loyalty to America and a military oath as the main method of keeping a doomsday weapon's specifics secret obviously didn't work very well. IMHO the less people who can look up the precise details of making the absolute best nuclear bombs, the better - a secret shared is no secret at all, oath or no. Hell, it's too bad that the secret's already out, the best possible thing that could have happened is no one knowing how to make one any more. Now we need them for a deterrent at best or mutually assured destruction at worst.
From what I can tell from WoW experience, is that every time they change it, you have to re-accept it before you can enter the game. It's essentially saying that if they make a contract with a gaping loophole, you can't keep exploiting that loophole indefinately if they fix it - it's not a 'lifetime' contract in which it's iron clad for both sides.