http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/20...le-with-cancer
Creative Assembly, I salute you.
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/20...le-with-cancer
Creative Assembly, I salute you.
That's a pretty cool way to go.
Christopher Hitchens said that to be able to have discussions with authors long after you are dead, through what you have left behind (in this case, Hitchens essays) is like living forever (link). However, James who is gone is able to command armies long after he is dead, via Total War Rome 2. What an epic thing to leave behind after you are dead, well done CA.
~Wille
Last edited by Kjertesvein; April 01, 2013 at 09:09 AM.
Thorolf was thus armed. Then Thorolf became so furious that he cast his shield on his back, and, grasping his halberd with both hands, bounded forward dealing cut and thrust on either side. Men sprang away from him both ways, but he slew many. Thus he cleared the way forward to earl Hring's standard, and then nothing could stop him. He slew the man who bore the earl's standard, and cut down the standard-pole. After that he lunged with his halberd at the earl's breast, driving it right through mail and body, so that it came out at the shoulders; and he lifted him up on the halberd over his head, and planted the butt-end in the ground. There on the weapon the earl breathed out his life in sight of all, both friends and foes. [...] 53, Egil's Saga- The pranks played on the knight Jean de Joinville, 1249, 7th crusade.I must tell you here of some amusing tricks the Comte d'Eu played on us. I had made a sort of house for myself in which my knights and I used to eat, sitting so as to get the light from the door, which, as it happened, faced the Comte d'Eu's quarters. The count, who was a very ingenious fellow, had rigged up a miniature ballistic machine with which he could throw stones into my tent. He would watch us as we were having our meal, adjust his machine to suit the length of our table, and then let fly at us, breaking our pots and glasses.
http://imgur.com/a/DMm19