amdreallyfast's comments

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

Edited By amdreallyfast

@logicalfrank because science

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

Edited By amdreallyfast

Great show. Love it. Now for ideas: science fiction and fantasy stories find various semi-plausible ways to make big war machines that are not isolated to the sea. How about the plausibility of an AT-AT walker (perhaps overly expensive, yes, but undeniably awesome) or a giant, nuclear powered airship kept in the air by giant props (a la Avengers flying carrier). And laser swords. You haven't talked about lightsabers. I have heard stories about people making a prototype out of a pen laser and mirrors that reflected the beam back and forth over and over and over to the point where the accumulated beam could cut through paper and thin tin.

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

Superconducting at only -196C? That's not bad. I thought that the good superconductors had to be cooled to liquid He temperature (-269C). I stand corrected.

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

@ForwardCompass @max-hit Sometimes I wonder if the people who incorrectly accuse others of having trouble differentiating fantasy from reality actually have more difficulty separating them themselves. They certainly seem to believe their own viewpoint.

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

@Fembot_Eulogy I also appreciate the coverage, but I think that it is important to note that some people DO blur the lines between their imagination and reality. People who, for whatever reason, spend most of their time daydreaming instead of observing the real world are more at risk of blurring the lines, and these people should be cared for and guided. Young children are more likely to be found in this state than more mature people because children do not yet have the experience levels of adults in order to differentiate all fantasy from reality. Children get nightmares over many things that are not real, demonstrating their difficulty in separating certain things from reality. Certainly, children must be guided wisely in their formative years, but tThis responsibility ultimately falls to the parents, not the ESRB.

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

I might just have to rent this sometime now.

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

Edited By amdreallyfast

@TaintedSaint79 Sadly, yes it is. Start Select was better (hint hint moderators).

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

@Biggs613 @monsterhq77 @Ortego13 I like that you added the "at least for me" qualifier instead of stating something as universal fact :). I prefer a story almost entirely opposite that though. One of my favorite things about the Chief was that he was a quiet, professional, 8ft tall, 1000lb, Mark 9000+ BA. I didn't want to emotionally connect with him as much as I wanted to follow him and see what he would do. I prefer to have someone to look up to, to learn from, to follow in my stories than someone that I can relate to. Its a preference.

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

Edited By amdreallyfast

In the cutscene where the chief's armor is getting put on, only the chief himself was not wearing a clean suit. Is the Chief so manly that his germs are considered toxic for the technicians?

Avatar image for amdreallyfast
amdreallyfast

327

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

3

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

@slicedbread117 Master Chief sprinting...I wonder how old he is now. He was about 40 wasn't he during the events of Halo 1? Maybe not too much older because of the cryo storage after the events of Halo 3, but still, for a guy nearing his fifties, he moves fast.