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  • Nuusku
    replied
    Originally posted by Thunder_Snus
    Just a pro tip. The cheapest wireless adapter works the same as the most expensive one.
    I know but the cheapest one here is 40 euros

    Leave a comment:


  • Thunder_Snus
    replied
    Originally posted by Nuusku
    Talking about the thingamazigly that lets you connect your 360 to wireless network to get access to play online etc. I don't have a cable, only WLAN
    Just a pro tip. The cheapest wireless adapter works the same as the most expensive one.

    Leave a comment:


  • OregonNative
    replied
    Originally posted by Nuusku
    Oh that looks good. Good luck waiting the 12 days without loosing your sanity
    Brother, I've already lost the last bit of sanity I had. I am dying to get home and set everything up. 11 days & 45 minutes left... whew!

    Leave a comment:


  • Nuusku
    replied
    Originally posted by OregonNative
    I play the heck out of games! I'll be home soon in 12 days, and I cannot wait to get back into them. I ordered some PC parts and the parts are at home waiting to be put together. The build was slightly over $2000. Here is the build.

    CPU: Intel Core i7-3930K 3.2GHz 6-Core Processor
    CPU Cooler: Corsair H100 92.0 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler
    Motherboard: Asus Rampage IV Extreme EATX LGA2011 Motherboard
    Memory: G.Skill Trident 4GB
    Memory: G.Skill Trident 4GB
    Hard Drive: Seagate Barracuda 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
    Hard Drive: Samsung 830 Series 128GB 2.5" Solid State Disk
    Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 670 2GB Video Card
    Case: Cooler Master HAF 932 Blue ATX Full Tower Case
    Power Supply: COOLER MASTER Silent Pro Gold Series RSC00-80GAD3-US 1200W ATX 12V v2.3
    Optical Drive: Sony AD-7280S-0B DVD/CD Writer

    I may upgrade to 16 GB ram, and add another GTX 670 video card, but for now it will be plenty! As soon as I get home, I'm going to grab a can of snus from the freezer, grab a redbull from the fridge, wash my hands (before touching PC parts), and get started building. After it's setup, tear open the Diablo III box, and get started! I can't wait. Only 12 days left.
    Oh that looks good. Good luck waiting the 12 days without loosing your sanity

    Leave a comment:


  • OregonNative
    replied
    I play the heck out of games! I'll be home soon in 12 days, and I cannot wait to get back into them. I ordered some PC parts and the parts are at home waiting to be put together. The build was slightly over $2000. Here is the build.

    CPU: Intel Core i7-3930K 3.2GHz 6-Core Processor
    CPU Cooler: Corsair H100 92.0 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler
    Motherboard: Asus Rampage IV Extreme EATX LGA2011 Motherboard
    Memory: G.Skill Trident 4GB
    Memory: G.Skill Trident 4GB
    Hard Drive: Seagate Barracuda 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
    Hard Drive: Samsung 830 Series 128GB 2.5" Solid State Disk
    Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 670 2GB Video Card
    Case: Cooler Master HAF 932 Blue ATX Full Tower Case
    Power Supply: COOLER MASTER Silent Pro Gold Series RSC00-80GAD3-US 1200W ATX 12V v2.3
    Optical Drive: Sony AD-7280S-0B DVD/CD Writer

    I may upgrade to 16 GB ram, and add another GTX 670 video card, but for now it will be plenty! As soon as I get home, I'm going to grab a can of snus from the freezer, grab a redbull from the fridge, wash my hands (before touching PC parts), and get started building. After it's setup, tear open the Diablo III box, and get started! I can't wait. Only 12 days left.

    Leave a comment:


  • Thunder_Snus
    replied
    Aside from my usual Halo, I've been exploring Civilization4 on pc.....i must say its different then what i would usually play but god dam is it fun and addictive

    Leave a comment:


  • Nuusku
    replied
    Played some Fallout New Vegas today. Found out a new thing: "The plants kill!" if you know what i'm referring to.
    My favorite part of the game. The music and the atmosphere just makes it so creepy. Specially if you keep reading the logs forward to the last one... Gave me chills

    Leave a comment:


  • sgreger1
    replied
    The Snus/crystal meth factory will soon be complete. Do not miss the occasion Snuson!

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  • Nuusku
    replied
    Join us! We are awesome

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  • sgreger1
    replied
    Man me and Nuusku are killing it on my Minecraft Tekkit server. For anyone who is familiar with the most amazing mod in the world (tekkit) and wants to play, let me know. We already got quite a world setup just over this past weekend. Automated quarries, rail systems, combustion engines, oil extractors, fuel refineries, the whole 9 yards.

    Leave a comment:


  • sgreger1
    replied
    Originally posted by PipenSnus
    I can think of at least one location in Fallout 3 where you can see trees. But if you never discovered it, I won't spoil your fun. You may want to replay the game.
    I am well aware of where there are trees. I'm just saying it would be cool to see project purity take off and have a map that was half lush and recovering and half wasteland. A small area with vegetation isn't really what I was referring to.

    Leave a comment:


  • PipenSnus
    replied
    Originally posted by sgreger1
    Oh no I understand what you are saying. In fact I always thought it would be really cool if they made a Fallout 3 sequel that started off with project purity working, and in the new game part of the world is no longer barren and radioactive, but full with lush forests etc. I liked the whole project purity thing and really hoped they would have ran with it. Would be nice to see some ****ing trees or something in that game. Or a scenario where the people are in the process of rebuilding due to project purity etc and have made some progress outside of just making shacks and re-using old buildings.
    I can think of at least one location in Fallout 3 where you can see trees. But if you never discovered it, I won't spoil your fun. You may want to replay the game.

    Leave a comment:


  • sgreger1
    replied
    Originally posted by PipenSnus
    I feel as if I've failed to get my point across. Certainly the Fallout series is dystopian, that's a given. But dystopianism is not equivalent to hopelessness and grim resignation. In fact, I think a case can be made that there is a thread of hope running throughout the series -- for example, in accomplishing the goals of Project Purity, in Fallout 3. It's been ages since I played the earlier games, but I seem to recall similar elements in them. The NCR were the good guys, as I recall, in Fallout 1 and 2, and quite committed to democracy, fairness, and rebuilding the world.

    To me, the whole point of the series is not the dystopian conditions themselves, but how the player chooses to react to them. You can choose to say, "To hell with everybody else," and be the baddest SOB in the wasteland, or you can be the hero that rights wrongs and works for a better world, or anything in between. New Vegas, IMO, fails in that it provides less of a balance between the two. That's not to say it's not an enjoyable game.

    You're certainly free to take the cynical "war never changes" POV of Ron Perlman's narrator, if that's how your character chooses to react to the Mojave Wasteland. But to me, the point of the series was that other points of view were not only possible, but playable, and I don't think NV stands up to its predecessors in that regard. I'm not asking for utopia, just balance.
    Oh no I understand what you are saying. In fact I always thought it would be really cool if they made a Fallout 3 sequel that started off with project purity working, and in the new game part of the world is no longer barren and radioactive, but full with lush forests etc. I liked the whole project purity thing and really hoped they would have ran with it. Would be nice to see some ****ing trees or something in that game. Or a scenario where the people are in the process of rebuilding due to project purity etc and have made some progress outside of just making shacks and re-using old buildings.

    Leave a comment:


  • PipenSnus
    replied
    Originally posted by sgreger1
    I think the overlying theme of the Fallout series is "War never changes". Following that theme, I think there is also a secondary theme present in both Fallout 3 and New Vegas, which is that "Government never changes". In the first one, it was that robot that was trying to maintain the existing government that fell after the war, and the rich folks all holed on in their big tower. In the new game it is the NCR or the rich weapons dealers etc. The point they are trying to make is that even in a post-apocalyptical wasteland, the same problems would persist regarding the nature of government (or power in general), as well as the wealth divide.

    There isn't much utopian shit going on in Fallout in case you havn't noticed, and I think the theme is fitting for the series, which tries to draw attention to the fact that war never changes, government never changes, and wealth and power never changes, regardless of what happens.

    Also Lilly was my favorite too for the same reason lol.
    I feel as if I've failed to get my point across. Certainly the Fallout series is dystopian, that's a given. But dystopianism is not equivalent to hopelessness and grim resignation. In fact, I think a case can be made that there is a thread of hope running throughout the series -- for example, in accomplishing the goals of Project Purity, in Fallout 3. It's been ages since I played the earlier games, but I seem to recall similar elements in them. The NCR were the good guys, as I recall, in Fallout 1 and 2, and quite committed to democracy, fairness, and rebuilding the world.

    To me, the whole point of the series is not the dystopian conditions themselves, but how the player chooses to react to them. You can choose to say, "To hell with everybody else," and be the baddest SOB in the wasteland, or you can be the hero that rights wrongs and works for a better world, or anything in between. New Vegas, IMO, fails in that it provides less of a balance between the two. That's not to say it's not an enjoyable game.

    You're certainly free to take the cynical "war never changes" POV of Ron Perlman's narrator, if that's how your character chooses to react to the Mojave Wasteland. But to me, the point of the series was that other points of view were not only possible, but playable, and I don't think NV stands up to its predecessors in that regard. I'm not asking for utopia, just balance.

    Leave a comment:


  • Crow
    replied
    No problem. I added an auction listing as well. You might be able to grab an official adapter at a lower price.

    Leave a comment:

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