A few months back a rumor surfaced about Nintendo letting Square-Enix work on the next PunchOut! game for Wii and that DBZ(Akira somthing) guy doing the character design. If you look in today's Wall Street Journal, Reggie gives an interview and he blurbs about it when answering a question about Nintendo trying to improve it's third-party relations
Name:
Anonymous2007-10-01 10:54 ID:SWPFnNq7
>letting Square-Enix work on the next PunchOut! game for Wii
>that DBZ(Akira somthing) guy doing the character design
lol wut
Name:
Anonymous2007-10-01 11:16 ID:IqaIBW2I
*groan* OP is telling the truth. It's on page 37.
This shit it ridiculous. DISGUSTING! It just confirms that Nintendo is turning away their hardcore fan base for casuals. I don't know why they couldn't handle this game themselves. It's the equivalent of letting Midway handle the next Zelda. I guess those assclowns are too busy with Brain Training and WiiFit to make any real games. I hope PS3 steamrolls them by the end of this gen.
Name:
Anonymous2007-10-05 4:53
>>3
why is it rediculous? It just confirms that Nintendo is turning away their hardcore fan base for casuals.
PROTIP: NINTENDO IS CATERING TO THE LARGEST AND THEREFORE THE MOST PROFITABLE SECTOR I guess those assclowns are too busy with Brain Training and WiiFit to make any real games.
game1 /geɪm/
noun, adjective, gam·er, gam·est, verb, gamed, gam·ing.
–noun
1. an amusement or pastime: children's games.
According to this definition, I fail to see how Brain Training is not a real game
I still have trouble finding any left in stores at times.
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redcream2007-10-07 6:39
Bullshit (often bowdlerized to BS), also Bullcrap, is a common English expletive. It can also be shortened to just "Bull".
Most commonly, it describes incorrect, misleading, false language and statements. Literally, it describes the feces of a bull. As with many expletives, it can be used as an interjection (or in many other parts of speech) and can carry a wide variety of meanings.
Bullshitting is usually when one makes statements that are false, or made-up. Usually people describe other people's action of making a lot of statements as bullshitting in arguments, when one is making up rules or making examples that are not anything to do with what they are discussing or when one is making statements by using examples that need different rules to be applied, so this person is bullshitting
As it contains the word "shit", the term is sometimes considered foul language, hence the use of the euphemistic abbreviations "bull" and "BS". Nonetheless, the term is prevalent in American English and, as with many words, the term is used in a variety of countries, some dating back to approximately the same era World War I. In British English, bollocks is a comparable expletive, although bullshit is now a commonly used expletive in British English also.