Gardening thread.
Gaming 1: You are likely to be eaten by a grue
A thread for the discussion of games: board, LARP, MMORPG, video, tabletop RPG, game theory etc. etc. and all attendant news, developments and ancillary subjects thereof, as well as coordinating/scheduling games either online or IRL. All are welcome to chime in, talk about their favorite games or learn about gaming of any sort.
PLEASE TO WHITEFONT SPOILERS for video games, RPG modules or anything for which foreknowledge of events might lessen one's enjoyment of whatever gaming experience.
So I guess first you'd have to go to Bureaucracy and propose a gardening thread.
Or is gardening a craft and therefore should be discussed in Minearverse?
So if I'm thinking about a garden just like the one in the Arcane University in Oblivion
That was a pretty garden, plus think of all the money you'll make selling potions.
I've heard that Fable II has internet content - I guess you open some treasure chests and insted of giving you an item they give you a URL, which you then surf to, play another little game, and then get a unique prize, which you will have the next time you log in to FAble II on the Xbox.
Rock Band also has crossover stuff between Xbox and internet.
Are these just for Xbox owners? Do the other consoles do the same sorts of things? Do other games do this?
The Wii keeps asking me if I want to log-on to the internet but I keep saying no.
amych, the alchemy garden from the Frostcrag Spire add-on would be much cooler.
the physically aggressive plants might be hard to find, though, so perhaps venus flytraps instead of harrada?
(also, for a true Oblivion garden, put in some pitcher plants and then ignore them.)
After a great many hours playing the latest GTA, I'm pleased to report I've completed 25% of the game.
After a great many hours playing the latest GTA, I'm pleased to report I've completed 25% of the game.
I've never played this. Does that mean you've stolen 25% of a car?
After a great many hours playing the latest GTA, I'm pleased to report I've completed 25% of the game.
I've gone back to play older video games and been a little startled at how quickly they can be completed. I think length of game play has steadily been getting longer, to the point that we mostly only notice when we go back to older games.
Am reminded of this, that I read just yesterday: In Praise of the Three-Hour Game