I thought it was just that the Autobots and Decepticons became Maximals and Predacons DURING the great war (in the 300 some-odd year between the arrival on Earth and the start of Beasts Wars.) not that they made peace, upgraded, and then started a new war.
The problem is companies don't release the streaming numbers like they do for film or television, so there's literally no way to actually corroborate whether it's failing or not. You have to take the industry's word at that, and these are literally the "Hollywood Accountants" everyone hears so...
Some quick research says they're not asking for writer's room to be doubled, they're asking for a minimum six person writers room. And that's what they're heading into the negotiation with; typically when negotiating both sides start high and wittle things down until they meet in the middle...
Nah, someone asked a question about it during Comic-Con, a Hasbro guy answered to the best of his ability, and for some reason it blew up way bigger than anyone expected because game news sites need to poop out as many low-content articles as they possibly can.
Knight Rider wasn't about KITT though, he was a supporting character. The main character was Michael Knight i.e. David Hasselhoff. K.I.T.T. was basically the C3PO/R2D2 of that series: The robot helper for the main character.
"They can just stay in vehicle mode" is the kind of suggestion that...
Activision employee says they know where the code is, so it was either a miscommunication or a lie that they didn't. (I'm guessing the fault lies with Activision, because it was easier to go "we can't find it" than to go "we're not interested in putting the games out again."
Tweeter is Chief...
Megatron routinely put massive swaths of humans, if not the whole planet of Earth in jeopardy in the G1 cartoon. He'd have a murder sheet a mile long if it wasn't a children's cartoon.
Hell, Starscream intentionally tried blowing up the earth at one point.
Yeah, TLK tanking probably did more damage to Bumblebee's box office than the scope of the film did. Maybe if they had made a clean, clear break from the Michael Bay stuff, but it was still same same weird faced, radio-talkin' Bumblebee.
"Keeping the money tight" runs in opposite of "Focusing on the robot cast" given every second they're on screen costs VFX money.
There's a reason there's always a human cast in these things.
I don't think they address any nasty stuff he did, just that he switched sides a crucial point, started protecting humans and essentially helped bring the war to the end.
I feel like if a f-bomb is the reason you're not feeling good about showing that film to kids, and not, you know, the excessive violence and murder, you have some oddball priorities.
It's not a kids film though? It's PG-13, as in it has themes and content that may not be suitable for children 13 and under.
I know that's dumb for a franchise based on a childs toyline (though how many R rated movies in the 80's got kids toylines.. Terminator, Robocop, Alien/s) but they slap...
I was talking about specifically Gamepass (with a little bit of Steam) and acknowledged that Playstation is in a different boat. Obviously platforms that never saw release wouldn't be included in that.
However, it appears I'm incorrect and Microsoft does need source files to make a game...
The excuse of "They can't find it on the hard drives" is kind of BS becuase if you own those game digitally, you can download them right now, meaning putting them onto gamepass would be trivial (and Micosoft was fully offering to do the work to make sure they work on the current hardware). Same...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.