A recently leaked old email from Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney is suddenly the talk of the town, at least on X. Epic Games has long been on the losing side of a lopsided race as they promoted The Epic Games Store to rival Valve’s Steam. The leaked email showed Tim Sweeney losing his composure while talking about the policies of Apple and Steam.
The email was originally sent on 3rd December 2018 to Gabe Newell, President of the Valve corporation. The document was leaked to netizens on 12th March 2024 and ever since fans have been having quite a laugh at the expense of the Epic Games CEO. The creator of Unreal Engine had some choice words in store for the people of Valve in the email that he sent.
Epic Games CEO Swears at Valve in Official Mail
Usually, official emails between competitors do not feature a whole lot of animosity.
The email was originally sent on 3rd December 2018 to Gabe Newell, President of the Valve corporation. The document was leaked to netizens on 12th March 2024 and ever since fans have been having quite a laugh at the expense of the Epic Games CEO. The creator of Unreal Engine had some choice words in store for the people of Valve in the email that he sent.
Epic Games CEO Swears at Valve in Official Mail
Usually, official emails between competitors do not feature a whole lot of animosity.
- 3/15/2024
- by Arkaneel Khan
- FandomWire
We find the remnants of our band stalking the pits of the Sinspire, patiently and calculatingly ascending lady luck’s ladder in Lynch’s Monte Carlo, the city-state Tal Verrar, marked on any map as the destination for the apex of high society and high stakes. The absurdity of the back in-saddle starting point exhibits the author’s greatest strength, his decisions on how to pace a novel. The cuts to the recent past, giving us the anatomy of the scheme and farther back to moments transpiring in the direct aftermath of The Lies of Locke Lamora are perfectly placed, once again functioning as a new door to open just before the occupied space stagnates. You seem to never be anywhere but where you want to be, Lynch just doesn’t let you in on the fact until a chapter later, and the reader isn’t sprinting or running a...
- 4/13/2015
- by Jay Tomio
- Boomtron
This is an “article” I wrote a few years ago that made rounds on Tumblr after I wrote it on a now defunct Tumblr I had. Beyond simply wanting to keep it from disappearing from the web, I actually wanted to read it again after running into a more recent and very fly theory regarding Darkstar’s (Gerold Dayne) possible father over at Elio’s board dedicated to George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire. For those who only experience what you call Game of Thrones via HBO, this covers a thus far minor character you probably won’t meet until season 5 who debuted in book 4, A Feast for Crows. I cleaned it up a bit just to remove references to other material that was on my old blog that wouldn’t make sense now. I’d add that since the time that I wrote this it...
- 4/2/2015
- by Jay Tomio
- Boomtron
Okay. So let me be clear, I dig Scott Lynch books. I really liked his debut, The Lies of Locke Lamora, and I think I might find myself in the minority when I say I dug the follow up in his Gentlemen Bastard cycle, Red Seas Under Red Skies, even more. I go back when it comes to reading about the exploits of the Thorn of Camorr. I was on this probably just after choice frameshifters were after hearing about it from other authors I was interviewing who had read early drafts/manuscripts and were telling me behind the scenes that Scott Lynch was what was next. I have documentation.
For some months now my partner in a former book review site — another Lynch fan — I co-own has been asking me during conference calls if I’ve read The Republic of Thieves, a book I’ve had loaded up to...
For some months now my partner in a former book review site — another Lynch fan — I co-own has been asking me during conference calls if I’ve read The Republic of Thieves, a book I’ve had loaded up to...
- 3/31/2015
- by Jay Tomio
- Boomtron
So fantasy, after all, is not just for geeks. With the blockbuster that has been the HBO adaptation of George R.R Martin’s fantasy series, A Song of Ice and Fire, suddenly the world of elves, magic and dragons are cool. Sexy, even.
A Game of Thrones may have done the impossible; improved upon an already excellent series of books. So often the most exquisitely detailed adaptations fall short of reader’s expectations, particularly in the fantasy genre. But my own version of Westeros wasn’t that far different to HBO’s- and I think the sex scenes are even better in the TV series.
I remember reading A Game of Thrones some five years ago now. I liked but didn’t love the books, and arduously made my way through the series in a relatively noncommittal way. I was on A Feast For Crows by the time the TV show came out.
A Game of Thrones may have done the impossible; improved upon an already excellent series of books. So often the most exquisitely detailed adaptations fall short of reader’s expectations, particularly in the fantasy genre. But my own version of Westeros wasn’t that far different to HBO’s- and I think the sex scenes are even better in the TV series.
I remember reading A Game of Thrones some five years ago now. I liked but didn’t love the books, and arduously made my way through the series in a relatively noncommittal way. I was on A Feast For Crows by the time the TV show came out.
- 7/4/2013
- by David Hynes
- Obsessed with Film
SATees
Everyone wants their baby to be the smartest on the block. Well, here’s a fashionable way to get a leg up. SATees — created by graphic designer Debbie Glassman and copywriter Scott Lynch — are a cool collection of onesies, bibs and tees ($20 to $24) that sport complex, test-worthy adjectives that can easily describe your little ones. Loquacious anyone?
Not only will the words boost your kids brains — they’ll boost yours too. After a few minutes of perusing their shop, we’ve already looked up pulchritudinous, edacious and consanguineous. Phew!
Snap these up for your own tots or as gifts for friends.
Everyone wants their baby to be the smartest on the block. Well, here’s a fashionable way to get a leg up. SATees — created by graphic designer Debbie Glassman and copywriter Scott Lynch — are a cool collection of onesies, bibs and tees ($20 to $24) that sport complex, test-worthy adjectives that can easily describe your little ones. Loquacious anyone?
Not only will the words boost your kids brains — they’ll boost yours too. After a few minutes of perusing their shop, we’ve already looked up pulchritudinous, edacious and consanguineous. Phew!
Snap these up for your own tots or as gifts for friends.
- 10/27/2009
- by Shanelle
- People - CelebrityBabies
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