A 93-year-old Japanese man has become the first person to be officially recognised as a survivor of both atomic bombs dropped on Japan by the United States at the end of the Second World War....
Telegraph.co.uk
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
A 93-year-old Japanese man has become the first person to be officially recognised as a survivor of both atomic bombs dropped on Japan by the United States at the end of the Second World War....
IkemenTommy wrote:Does this qualify as another pointless Guinness Record?
nottu wrote:Un-fucking-lucky? This guy survived two atomic blasts and is still alive at 93. I'm just hoping I make it home tonight on my bicycle.
Kotaku.com wrote:kotaku.com
Pro tip: when two Japanese video game designers are your co-panelists, mind your references to the atomic bombing of Japan. It makes talking about future game development... weird.
Unfortunately, Fallout 3 designer Emil Pagliarulo from Bethesda Softworks unintentionally referenced that very subject during today's "Evolving Game Design: Today and Tomorrow, Eastern and Western Game Design" panel at GDC. It was an innocent poor choice of words, of course, an unintended flub that was both instantly cringe-worthy and darkly comedic.
After sarcastically revealing that he drinks cold medicine to find game design inspiration, Goichi Suda asked Pagliarulo whether Bethesda was planning on "a Japanese version of Fallout" to which the Fallout 3 designer said, "Well, what can we destroy in Japan?"
After processing that post nuclear destruction and an awkwardly long pause, Suda simply said "Wow..."
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 87 guests