I wouldn't say this one was nonsensical litigation, he was selling pirated software. If he was doing it for free it'd be a much different case.
Butterpaderp
To me, it's a similar game to animal crossing. Lots of things to do and customize, not alot of depth. But, some people enjoy that, and that's okay. And I gotta give them credit for adding so many updates over the years.
Happy to report that at around 10:30 EST, on a work day, there were about ~200k divers on the map
Kinda insane, wonder whats it's gonna look like after 5
I got a couple hundred dollars deep into hearthstone, but luckily they came out with cubelock and I lost all interest after having to fight that stupid deck over and over.
Having just replaced one, it's honestly not that bad, but it is nice to have a second pair of hands cause it's so heavy. There's a couple bolts on top, then you just tilt it forward and pick it up off the bracket
I dunno man, fishing line's pretty strong stuff
Capitalism isn't the fix, banks are in cahoots with visa/mastercard and they will absolutely shut down any competition.
But what I'm saying is that this is normal practice for decades (!!!) now for all console manufacturers
I can't think of a single console that normalized banning people for buying used games...except for switch 2. Wanna give some examples?
Per the article, it wasn't a pirated game though, it was used. That's the issue here.
They can be ban happy with pirates if they want, but banning people from being able to just swap games in real life is fuckin dumb.
Right, but in the context of the original clip, we're talking about refusing them
Hypothetically, if you were in charge of screening immigrants, what kind of culture would you refuse?
ABC execs only care about money, same thing with every other corporation bending the knee