I'm me. You want to know something, ask. He/him, widowed, father, grandfather, #diceiple, rpg nerd, dungeon master, lover of all things, creator of no things.
🇨🇦 Heading to Toronto to co-host the @cgameawards on Thurs night with my space sister and fellow Commander Shepard @jhaletweets!
🫡 Well-deserved congratulations to all of this year’s nominees and recipients - you’ve done the industry and our country proud.
#Canada#videogames
Autism: I need clear instructions.
ADHD: I need short instructions.
AuDHD: Make it clear, make it short, make it interesting and don’t talk to me while I read it.
Arcanaut Studios will not use AI to make Star Wars Fate of the Old Republic.
Director Casey Hudson calls AI “creatively soulless” and “really unimpressed with it”.
"It's hard to imagine where it is actually helpful" says the original KOTOR director.
Chuck Norris held a 183-10-2 record and was a 6x world champion in full contact bare knuckle karate.
On top of that, he beat heavyweight kickboxing world champion Joe Lewis 3 consecutive times and also had a brutal sparring match with undefeated kickboxing world champion, Bill Superfoot Wallace, that lasted an hour and a half. According to Wallace, they practically stalemated and "beat the crap out of each other".
Chuck was trained in kickboxing/boxing by Benny The Jet Urquidez and was also trained in BJJ by the Gracies and Machados for 20 years. Even being able to submit Carlos Machado himself on occasion.
Chuck had a 315 Ibs bench press at 180 lbs bodyweight and was said to have a grip back in the day that nobody could escape from because he was so strong. Even Jean Claude Van Damme said he'd never fight Chuck Norris, despite being a kickboxing world champion himself.
Chuck held a 10th degree black belt in Chun Kuk Do, a 9th degree black belt in Tang Soo Do, an 8th degree black belt in Taekwondo, a 5th degree black belt in Karate, a 3rd degree black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu and a black belt in Judo.
Rest in peace, Chuck!
After Japan’s Yuzuru Hanyu won gold, Canadian skater Keegan Messing noticed the Japanese flag was not raised and stepped in to hold it up himself, a simple act of sportsmanship that turned a medal ceremony into a moment of unity