- Aug 25, 2012
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Nice, see yall been enjoying that. I haven't touch my PS since The Taken King dropped.SoloStation playing Until Dawn
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Nice, see yall been enjoying that. I haven't touch my PS since The Taken King dropped.SoloStation playing Until Dawn
Yeah man I finally finished Arkham Knight on Knightmare difficulty. Started playing MGS V which is but Redbox gave me a free game rental so picked up Until Dawn for the night. Joint is kinda nutsNice, see yall been enjoying that. I haven't touch my PS since The Taken King dropped.
SoloStation playing Until Dawn
lol you been got bashed, broespecially THAT game
Keep on bashing.........
Likewise
Great convo tonight, definitely learned a lot
Hey does the taken king destiny game up your rank or something because I'm a level 21 now.
Also, man I love the kinect on XB1... super clutch with reading the code qr code instead of typing that crap out.
That and the voice commands are so clutch
U had gems in there broGreat convo tonight, definitely learned a lot
Listen to an Exclusive Preview of Halo 5‘s ‘Hunt the Truth’ Season Two
It’s strange days in Microsoft’s Halo universe. Uncomfortable mysteries abound as Halo 5: Guardians nears. The series’ hulking Master Chief—savior of 26th century humanity—is inexplicably AWOL. Super-soldiers hunt super-soldiers. Ghastly revelations threaten cherished mythologies. Unrest looms.
This spring, in a series of podcasts dubbed Hunt the Truth, the mythology of the Halo universe was thrown into tumult. Loosely modeled after radio dramas like This American Life, the program explored, and called into question, the franchise’s de facto narrative of a noble government forging genetically augmented superhumans to save the world from theocratic aliens. (The program also recalls 2004’s Halo 2-related I Love Bees campaign.) Listeners loved it: Hunt the Truth, which just won a Clio, wound up drawing an audience of over 6.7 million, putting it in the top 1% of all iTunes podcasts.
At the outset, fictional war journalist Benjamin Giraud begins work on a rhapsodic profile of Master Chief, only to discover cracks in his sources that only widen. By the end of season one, Ben has flipped, his military hagiography become a salvo aimed at the heart of Halo‘s Office of Naval Intelligence, the shady black ops and propaganda group that commissioned him to write the puff piece in the first place.
It’s a tale that feels parsecs from the gung-ho, boo-rah tone of the shooter that debuted on Microsoft’s original Xbox over a decade ago. And yet the story ended ambiguously, leaving fans to speculate about the impact of Ben’s actions. Where was he now? What of his revelations? What would insurrectionist leader FERO, who’d helped Ben from the shadows, do next? Who was FERO, anyway? And how did any of this tie into Halo 5, which arrives on October 27?
(Seriously, it’s captivating stuff Halo aficionados should not miss.)
Answers to the questions above are coming in Hunt the Truth‘s second season, which debuts September 22 on the series’ official Tumblr page. Halo franchise development director Frank O’Connor, Hunt the Truth creative director Noah Eichen and season two lead Janina Gavankar (True Blood, Far Cry 4, The Mysteries of Laura) shared exclusive details about Hunt the Truth season two with TIME, and it starts with the following audio clip:
CLICK ON THE LINK ABOVE TO FIND THE AUDIO CLIP, THEY USE AN EMBEDDED AUDIO PLAYER
That would be FERO, played by Gavankar, the inscrutable rebel leader who saved Ben’s bacon last time around. By the way, not Ben’s war journalist compadre Petra (voiced by Cobie Smulders), as season one’s finale maybe had you, like me, thinking. At this point, glancing at season two’s mostly new cast list (which includes series newcomers Tamara Taylor, Mark Hamill , Vanessa Marshall, Alan Tudyk, Rosa Salazar, Bruce Thomas, Peter Serafinowicz and William Salyers), Petra is missing in action. There’s a perfectly good reason for this, Eichen tells me: He didn’t want another season of “journalist tells a story.”
“Ben’s story covered a lot,” he says. “And where we landed with season two tells a story that’s very different from season one and allows us to get a little bit closer to the action than I think we would have been able to be in canon otherwise.” Imagine Ira Glass as an insurrectionist bigwig in an interstellar yarn–or not–and you can see why Eichen needed to ditch the NPR pastiche.
It’s still a narrator telling a story, of course, but Eichen says the tone is completely different. “It’s not a person making a show, it’s not a host who’s making this for an audience,” he tells me. “I started thinking about it like True Detective season one, where it’s a person recalling events. And it’s a little more like a horror film to me, there’s some really horrific stuff going on as we get closer to Halo 5.”
Season two, which will be shorter than season one but with longer episodes, picks up shortly after the events of season one, and deals with the implications of Ben’s tectonic revelations, this time with FERO in the driver’s seat. Whatever happened to sever communications with the Halo-verse’s outer colonies during season one–clearly portending what we’ll be grappling with in Halo 5–season two is about the trials and tribulations FERO undergoes to expose what she knows to the rest of the world.
Speculation about who FERO might be runs the gamut. Is she Ilsa Zane, a supersoldier-turned-insurrectionist who appeared in a Halo-related comic book? Perhaps Dr. Catherine Halsey, the very scientist who created Master Chief? Gavankar tells me we’ll find out soon enough. “She’s a fascinating enough character for the entire second season to be hers,” she says. “I can say she’s a complicated lady. She told you a little bit of who she is, and she’s been through a lot.”
Ben, voiced by Keegan-Michael Key, is coming back, too, but in what fashion (realtime? past tense?) remains a mystery. If the first season was his character just finding stuff out, basically victimized by information, O’Connor says season two is about “taking a step back.” FERO knows a lot more than Ben did, and “that helps us provide an interesting perspective on Benjamin.”
So can we trust FERO? “I don’t want to give anything away, because I like that you’re questioning everything,” Gavankar tells me. “After season one you couldn’t trust anybody. All I can say is FERO saved Ben, so if you’re going into this season trusting anyone, you should trust her.”
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Fifa Tomorrow.2k FRIDAY.
Dont forget where you from, don't nobody play soccer out here.
I give my culo to Jumpy in Fifa Tomorrow.
Yessir2k FRIDAY.
He had it right the first time
Fifa Tomorrow.
No you don't forget where you're from! Ain't no West 4th back home in neither of our islands.Dont forget where you from, don't nobody play soccer out here.
Nope, playing Destiny whenever you're on FifaI give my culo to Jumpy in Fifa Tomorrow.
No you don't forget where you're from! Ain't no West 4th back home in neither of our islands.