We have released two indie feature films under Creative Commons licenses through Mininova using BitTorrent, and both have been listed on the IMDb. In both cases we had a very limited screening - you just rent somewhere large enough and do your own screening, that's perfectly valid.
In both cases, that was enough for our flicks to get listed.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1265599/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1334226/
Great new feature - but not precisely new. It's been in WM's like ion3 and fluxbox for years - I used to damn-near rely on applications tabbed together in ion3's non-tiled workspaces for lots of stuff I was doing several years ago when I worked at a Linux-based dev-shop.
It is a matter of public safety that google has not released a Linux or OS X version yet. You see, if the incredible Awesome of Chrome were to clash with the respective Awesome of either Linux or OS X, there would be an overload of Awesome, which in turn would become an explosion of Rad.
This would cause a resonance-cascade incident that could result in fires, floods, a breakdown of world society and possibly also cause supermarkets to run out of most forms of effective cleaning products.
I'm trying to imagine a sequence in a GTA-esque game where you have to torture someone for information, and I don't think it'd work. The game is too farcical - you'd need the sequence to be in a more 'dramatic' game. And I think you're right. The odds of a gaming company, even a "controversial" one like Rockstar or Running With Scissors, is very slim. Even Rockstar's Manhunt games stopped shy of torture.
Spycraft: The Great Game
on
Torture in Games
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· Score: 5, Interesting
An old live-action video game from the mid '90s titled Spycraft: The Great Game had a torture sequence. You had to interrogate someone and had control over how much voltage to use.
It was quite easy to inadvertently kill her - and I will say that the first time I hit a switch and saw an actor screaming in pain actually was very jarring. Even knowing damn well it was an actor in a video game.
Isn't suing the ISP because of what people do on the internet something akin to suing your local road & traffic authority because some thieves used one of their roads to escape on?
It comes with a picture of one on a little tile.:) However, if you truly want to simulate the effect of a chainsaw (to scale) on the little miniatures, I find a dremel works wonders.
Yes, if you play in 'campaign' mode you get to beef up your character over time. Mostly in the way of 'default' armour and such.
The board game is actually a lot of fun to play. It's slow, tactical and actually requires some thought - completely unlike Doom 3!
We have released two indie feature films under Creative Commons licenses through Mininova using BitTorrent, and both have been listed on the IMDb. In both cases we had a very limited screening - you just rent somewhere large enough and do your own screening, that's perfectly valid. In both cases, that was enough for our flicks to get listed. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1265599/ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1334226/
Great new feature - but not precisely new. It's been in WM's like ion3 and fluxbox for years - I used to damn-near rely on applications tabbed together in ion3's non-tiled workspaces for lots of stuff I was doing several years ago when I worked at a Linux-based dev-shop.
... set the MySQL root password to something other than blank.
It is a matter of public safety that google has not released a Linux or OS X version yet. You see, if the incredible Awesome of Chrome were to clash with the respective Awesome of either Linux or OS X, there would be an overload of Awesome, which in turn would become an explosion of Rad. This would cause a resonance-cascade incident that could result in fires, floods, a breakdown of world society and possibly also cause supermarkets to run out of most forms of effective cleaning products.
I'm trying to imagine a sequence in a GTA-esque game where you have to torture someone for information, and I don't think it'd work. The game is too farcical - you'd need the sequence to be in a more 'dramatic' game. And I think you're right. The odds of a gaming company, even a "controversial" one like Rockstar or Running With Scissors, is very slim. Even Rockstar's Manhunt games stopped shy of torture.
An old live-action video game from the mid '90s titled Spycraft: The Great Game had a torture sequence. You had to interrogate someone and had control over how much voltage to use. It was quite easy to inadvertently kill her - and I will say that the first time I hit a switch and saw an actor screaming in pain actually was very jarring. Even knowing damn well it was an actor in a video game.
Isn't suing the ISP because of what people do on the internet something akin to suing your local road & traffic authority because some thieves used one of their roads to escape on?
... still make Microsoftians foam at the mouth.
It comes with a picture of one on a little tile. :) However, if you truly want to simulate the effect of a chainsaw (to scale) on the little miniatures, I find a dremel works wonders.
Yes, if you play in 'campaign' mode you get to beef up your character over time. Mostly in the way of 'default' armour and such. The board game is actually a lot of fun to play. It's slow, tactical and actually requires some thought - completely unlike Doom 3!