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Actually I think you'll find magazines often refer to them as Sneak 'em Ups, and just because its not in your web-dictionary dosn't mean they dont.
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Wikipedia isn't a web dictionary moron, it's a free unbiased encyclopedia.
It makes no difference that a bunch of limp dicked magazines make up silly names, "Sneak 'em Ups" is not a genre, it's just bullshit.
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what is up with your love of wikipedia? Do you constantly check it it to prove people wrong or something?
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No, I actually never check it unless I'm researching something. I cite it to prove the validity of my point and to demonstrate that I am not merely posticulating. If you bring the validity of Wikipedia into question, then you are a moron.
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Oh and Dino, dont you find it a little hypocritical that you describe music as 'something that moves you', whereas you use Wikipedia definitions against descriptions other people use?
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What? That's a completely invalid argument. If a description made by someone such as yourself, does not match up to a Wikipedia definition, then the description is incorrect. I don't understand how you've made a connection between music being something that moves you, and wikipedia being something that disproves the deranged rabbling of idiots. Nor do I understand how through this you came to the conclusion that I am a hypocrite.
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feel free to give examples
bombs don't count...
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Why do bombs not count? Are you simply saying that because you feel that bombs are something that I could use against you?
I could come up with a list but basically, but really I'd just be expanding on splinter cell and metal gear solid, which both made innovatative and interesting use of items other than weapons. My point has already been proven by the success of such games - gamers prefer games with more depth, and more to do. The days of the simple arcade shooters are long gone, which is why it puzzles me that games where the only form of gameplay is shooting are STILL being made.
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lol, and you are? Your profile says nothing about you working at a video game manufacture
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Firstly, I wish to express incredulity at the fact that you seem to question my credibility because my chosen career is not listed in my forum profile.
Secondly, to answer your question, YES, I work in the games industry. I attended the last two (excluding this year) E3 trade shows as a result, which was not a pleasant experience. The reason I don't like to mention it is because people make a big deal out of it, or accuse me of boasting.
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really? a little further down...
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That quote from Wikipedia just proves my point. Way to have an argument so weak that it does me more favours than you.
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then I suppose those millions of people who have bought games like Halo and Medal of Honor have no taste.
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No, some of them have taste - some of them stopped playing it, or don't play it often. The ones that lack taste are the people who play it for hours on end.
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games are what you make them
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Um, no they aren't. Not unless you're a game developer. Games are either shitty or they're not, and if they're not shitty, they either appeal to you or they don't. Games are what they are - linear games are linear, repetative games are repetative.
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(I made an edit and may have left a few mistakes)
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Yeah, you did leave a few mistakes, IE the entire post.
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We've consulted an online dictionary in a discussion about first-person shooters. This thread reeks of nerdiness.
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For the last time, it's an online ENCYCLOPEDIA. The clue is in the wikiPEDIA part of the name. And it was not consulted, it was cited the prove validity so that nobody could accuse me of conjecture, since that tends to be the recourse of the weak minded.
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Art can be a tool used to induce thinking. Art can make you say to yourself, "WTF?" and make you ask questions. Art can do many things. It can be a catalyst or a communicative tool, and that's what entertains us.
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A pile of steaming shit in the middle of a sidewalk could be a catalyst for a long debate on how best to prevent dog's shitting, after which the conclusion is reached that some form of anal cork is in order, however that doesn't mean it's art.
This kind of attitude is one that's spawned the inane, banal works of art you might see in the tate modern. A pig sliced in half, an unmade bed, and the classic heap of scrapmetal or rubbish. It's one giant parody of itself, punctuated by moronic 'art students' who mill about hmming and striking various thoughtful, studious poses, all while polluting the environment with the sound of the verbal diarrhoea that is the hopeless reading between the lines and seeing something that isn't actually there. Years ago we locked people like that up in padded cells (or just cells) and threw away the key. Now they're free to roam streets (and galleries) and are available in fourteen shades of gucci, and 9 different pungent unwashed fragrances.