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Infinite wisdom!
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 2:32 pm
by Mitera Nikkou
Alright, so I'm once again available for questions. Don't be shy. :O
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 2:50 pm
by Raleigh
Hm.. so I can ask any question?
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 4:27 pm
by Mitera Nikkou
Pretty much. But I'd rather be asked something that's either tough or involves a lot of thought.
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 4:35 pm
by David
OK here is one for you, why do you think the game "Tetsu 1: Densha de Battle! World Grand Prix" exists? I think it requires a lot of thought since the game basically involves racing trains. Yep...
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 4:48 pm
by Mitera Nikkou
I've never played the game, but I imagine that it exists because someone had to do it simply because others were doing other things. It probably came down to their own interest in trains and the fact that there aren't many games out there that involves racing trains, probably ignoring the other fact concerning the lack thereof due to a general lack of interest with racing trains in the market.
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 7:13 pm
by Rowan
Why do hotdogs and hotdog buns come in different numbers?
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 7:42 pm
by Raleigh
Hm.. a tough question ehh? ... those are hard to think up since there is always the smarmy answers. Ahh here we go. Why doesn't Square Enix release a Final Fantasy 1-XII, the spin offs, and Chrono Trigger and Chrono Cross as a collection edition?
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 8:00 pm
by Anamnesis
To escape from 'nothingness' you must discern that 'nothingness' exists, thus making it 'something.' My question is...how do you get into 'nothingness?'
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 8:11 pm
by Mitera Nikkou
Rowan:
It's a conspiracy to make people spend more money than necessary for what they need. *_*
Raleigh:
Because they'd make less money. That's why they tend to put out a few together rather than all of them. For one, more people can afford the smaller collections; plus, as an actual collector's edition, it'd be rather bulky and they'd have to make all of the games compatible with at least one console system for convenience's sake. Rabid, crazy fans may buy however many of the collector's edition that they make, but it'd be costly because making the collector's edition would be costly. Which brings us back to why more would be able to afford the small collections (non-edition) and thus, over time, more would be able to buy them since not many would be able to save enough for the collector's edition. Also, as seen with Final Fantasy 3, remaking old games is more profitable than reselling the old version at a small fraction of its price, which is why Chrono trigger and Final Fantasy 6 (I believe), as well as a few other games, were sold together on a new console for the price of one game. I have one game that has thirteen games on it, for the Genesis and Gamegear. That's thirteen of them for the price of one. :O But that's how they make money on games that wouldn't sell well alone... Or in pairs... Or in threes... <.<; Either way, it's all about the money. If it weren't, the Final Fantasy 6 adaption for the Playstation likely wouldn't have been so crappy. >.<
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 8:18 pm
by Mitera Nikkou
Sullen:
We are nothingness. People wonder how something came to be, such as God and the Big Bang; how can something always be? Certainly something must have started at some point. But they could have always been if they had always been nothing. Nothing is something, or else we wouldn't have nothing as a way to define something. And a specific nothing, such as space, has scientists treating nothing as if it's something even though they can't discern it. It's just one of the better explanations to explain why there are gravitational forces in the universe that don't match up to our laws of physics.
Otherwise, if you want to get into nothing but nothing, just take a trip on a space shuttle and leap out into space all nekkid and stuff. XD
Posted:
Fri Jun 01, 2007 11:21 pm
by Selena Aninikkou
*hugs* ^^;
Hi mommy ^^
Posted:
Sat Jun 02, 2007 12:06 am
by Mitera Nikkou
*Returns the hug*
Hiya back. Have a question? ;p
Posted:
Sun Jun 03, 2007 2:12 pm
by Queen Octavia
Do people define their opinions or do opinions defire their people?
Posted:
Sun Jun 03, 2007 2:40 pm
by Mitera Nikkou
People define their opinions. People in general have a penchant for placing definitions despite the irrelevance and/or reality of something in question. And when someone realizes that their opinion isn't popular with those with whom they desire positive feedback from (in whatever form that may be), they'll try to convince people that there was a misunderstanding while they twist and change the meaning of the words and/or phrases that they had previously used. Opinions ultimately do reflect a person, but the perception of those opinions will not only vary, but they may not even be true. In that regard, the only certainty is that people can and do define opinions; that is the reality.
Posted:
Sun Jun 03, 2007 2:45 pm
by Just some lady
Ooh...Why're you answering questions? <3