Real games tend to have a more glossier / define finish as compared to the fake counterparts and not colors that are over exaggerated.
Not exact matches
Some
games were made up of random groups of people, while others involved small groups of people who were connected to one another, similar to how humans
tend to congregate in
real - life scenarios.
Holiness for me was found in the mess and labour of giving birth, in birthday parties and community pools, in the battling sweetness of breastfeeding, in the repetition of cleaning, in the step of faith it took to go back to church again, in the hours of chatting that have to precede the
real heart - to - heart talks, in the yelling at my kids sometimes, in the crying in restaurants with broken hearted friends, in the uncomfortable silences at our bible study when we're all weighing whether or not to say what we really think, in the arguments inherent to staying in love with each other, in the unwelcome number on the scale, in the sounding out of vowels during bedtime book reading, in the dust and stink and heat of a tent city in Port au Prince, in the beauty of a soccer
game in the Haitian dust, in the listening to someone else's story, in the telling of my own brokenness, in the repentance, in the secret telling and the secret keeping, in the suffering and the mourning, in the late nights
tending sick babies, in confronting fears, in the all of a life.
Monreal even
tends to feature in most cup
games, meaning that the only
real opportunities Gibbs has had to play in recent seasons, is the final few minutes towards the end of a
game, when Monreal is injured, or on the occasion that Wenger fancies a rotation at left back.
Gamer guys
tend to get a bad rapthey can be seen as competitive, geeky, anti-social, even a little out of touch with the
real world.
Female characters in
games do
tend to get scrutinized for how well they are «womaning» (much like high profile women in the
real world) in a way that male characters don't
tend to.
There's a big difference, and the report said so; but what
tended to get broadcast is that personalized learning was the
real game - changer.
The physics of a bike are just so much more complex to bring in to a
game, and thus the results
tend to be a very limited replication of the
real thing.
Many of these
games have in - built benchmarking tools and thus aren't completely accurate representations of
real - world gameplay, but typically they
tend to stress a system more than the regular gameplay will.
I'm a long time
Real Time Strategy (RTS) fan, but I
tend to play more on my Xbox 360 than my PC because I prefer to
game sitting on my couch looking at my 42 ″ tv and not sitting at my desk with a much smaller monitor.
Although I
tend to spend most of my free time playing
games I also read fiction and magazines, watch movies at a rate of about 6 per week and hang out with a solid group of
real world friends.
Villordsutch reviews Mantis Burn Racing... I'm a fan of racing
games, though I
tend to shy away from the ultra-realistic
games with a hundred or so
real - life models, engines fine - tuned to meet race - worthy standards and handling so sensitive a fool like me — who doesn't understand the meaning of «brakes» — is guaranteed to slam into -LSB-...]
It's still very Mario inspired, but the levels often don't
tend to look overly cartoony like the ones in Mario 3D Land and other such
games, they have an appearance which makes them feel almost like
real places.
The problem however, is that the sheer amount of indie
games available for the PC means that for every darling that gets celebrated such as Gone Home or Nuclear Throne,
real diamonds in the rough such as DiscStorm and Extreme Exorcism
tend to fall in - between the cracks and go largely unnoticed as a result.
Yes, it's true, I
tend to spend a lot of time on the internet and in
real life gushing about
games and comics and whatnot.
The
game script
tends to refer to these in parallel to their
real - life counterparts, which can make for some amusing dialogue so long as you're aware of what's going on in the
game industry.
Seeing as you
tend to get them rather slowly, you can spend
real cash to get crystals and save time on leveling in
game.
Dark Souls is the philosophy of life presented in the most raw and humble way, and even while video
games tend to be your escape from
real life
Dark Souls is the philosophy of life presented in the most raw and humble way, and even while video
games tend to be your escape from
real life, Dark Souls keep you synced with the absolute values of staying alive and living a life.
The
game does
tend to get a bit laggy from time to time, which is my only
real gripe.
In a world where racing
games tend to lean more and more towards a 1:1 simulation of cars in
real life, it's nice to have a
game come along every now and then that throws a wrench in the formula.
Real - world settings without supernatural elements are even less common in RPGs than other
game genres, perhaps partially because RPG gameplay
tends to be somewhat abstracted in the first place.
However, given that the handheld would
tend to use less battery when its 3D effect was turned off, we'd expect
real - world battery life to skew closer to the upper end of that range, depending on the graphical intensity of the
game in question.
Might also suggest two party
games for each scenario, because war
games where only one party is in control will
tend to reflect more optimal solutions than will be arrived at by
real events.
The only
real issue that comes up is with the fact that the Galaxy A3
tends to refresh the home screen after playing a high - end
game, or when spending a lot of time in the camera application.
Ultimately a check on Bay Area
real estate values is, and will continue to be, that jumbo loans require a little more skin in the
game than 3.5 % down OR have terms / conditions / rates that drive away intelligent young tech workers (they
tend not to be in love with over-leveraging as much as our BP community members are... especially when it's a place to live, not a pure investment).
Here are signs and signals that you are falling victim to the seven lies agents
tend to tell themselves about success in the
real estate
game: