@ekomvlr@SquibSlytherin@HoopsVGM@TrevenArt_ Well only one instance of regional starters, especially for a legends game. So who’s to say but I’m assuming the starters wouldn’t lose their main typing.
The Charlotte Hornets are retiring Dell Curry’s No. 30 jersey on March 19, sources tell ESPN. Curry, the 1994 Sixth Man of the Year, ranks second in points in franchise history and spent 10 of his 16 NBA seasons in Charlotte (1988-98). He currently serves as a team ambassador.
@khew27x@JohnnyTunes@TommyBeer I’m not say it’s true for everyone but I feel like a lot of people at Knicks games in my experience also include tourists, transplants, or foreigners in NY for the first time looking to catch any NBA game. Not saying there aren’t plenty of Knicks fans in a losing season.
@OttoVonStark@CGab_ing@Light_88_ You know a Mewtwo focused Legends game set in the past would go hard. It doesn’t even need to be a Gen 1 focused game but it would make the most sense. Gen 2 would work well too in theory.
@RyDawgE_ Yeah it’s probably my favorite Pokémon game and that’s having grown up playing since Emerald/LeafGreen. The game basically has not much to do after you’ve caught Arceus. Sure you can go catch shinies and stuff but there is a hard stop to what you can really do here.
@JustJonkins@PLShitpost Although, with PLA, you couldn’t really trade Pokémon so you needed to be able to catch them in game in order to complete the Pokédex. I think PLZA has access to trading from my understanding.
@NEWAVEJ That’s actually not true. College accomplishments are considered in the Naismith Hall of Fame, it’s an overall basketball Hall of Fame. It has never been an institution exclusively for Pro leagues. Plus high school is amateur level, college would be collegiate.
@LikeMike2Day@AgeofStarss@NoLimitsRiq @FearedLA I mean the better sidekick imo would be one that is capable of winning on their own. That sounds more impressive on the player than one that wasnt capable of that like Kyrie.
@RobertJMolnar@Freyjaskeeper20@cieniggle@HoodiiMamba Kevin Durant is also the only instance in sports history where he returned from an Achilles tear and was still on a superstar level. That’s more because of his specific play style though. Unlike an ACL tear, this one tends to break careers historically.