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Crazy Eyes
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Comments by "Crazy Eyes" (@CrizzyEyes) on "LEAKED: Sony Japan reacts to Concord" video.
@michaellacks9179 Uh... "cold take" doesn't mean "bad," it means uncontroversial.
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@Noctaru Modern Squeenix seems to be set on a one-way track to ruin itself with poorly thought out initiatives. They were doing great until the mid 2010's.
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@RM_VFX I figured OP typod. There's no possible way any game cost half a trillion dollars. The company probably isn't even worth that much
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Skull and Bones may be a very close second or even a competitor for the first.
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@marikothecheetah9342 Wouldn't it be the US getting into Poland's ass, in this case? Or do you mean that Polish officials like to suck up to Americans? Sorry, here in the US "crawling up someone's ass" has two different connotations. Either you are causing them a lot of trouble, or you are trying to impress them so they like you more.
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@DundG Their marketing analysts are shockingly dumb. It seems like they are content to believe that Twitter users perfectly represent the tastes of audiences outside their nation. This problem goes all the way back to the earlier days of gaming, where you had Japanese execs who would alternately believe that Americans as a rule preferred harder games, and in the worst case would ruin their own games with artificial difficulty to meet this supposed demand, or even the opposite where they believed that Americans preferred easier games (although this was less common). Meanwhile, in the US, Japanese gamers were usually seen as more dedicated or more skilled. Ironically, Resident Evil was really easy in its native release for the first two games, and Capcom later re-released them as the "US editions" that included the difficulty modes the US had. RE's reputation for creating the survival horror genre likely would never have happened if we got the easier version
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@lisprn-tt1tu It's a small minority of Westerners that are over-represented using Twitter. Ironically, though, you are not far from the truth. I am an American, non-religious, and I have long held that Puritanism infects our culture even today. Even on the so-called non-religious progressive left. In the 1960s through to the 1990s, it was the position of the left that women should be free to have sex and pose nude because it is liberating. Now it is demeaning and objectifying. That was previously the position of the Protestant right, and they use the exact same terms and reasoning. Yet somehow sex workers are still a protected class that do not "demean" themselves with their own labor. It is a completely cognitively dissonant, untenable position.
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