the vita is great, don't get me wrong, but the lack of L3 and R3 are a big problem for such a small thing. in hectic shooters where you need to be fast, it's just not great to have sprint be anything except clicking the stick. the problem with having it be a face button or a shoulder button is that you have to take your finger off the camera control or ADS, which is a small thing to adjust (move your finger 1 cm), but it's all the difference when you're in a gunfight. any small thing can become a huge problem and will create a lot of frustration.
how do you know when you'll die? that's the first time i've heard that from a theist.
i couldn't live not knowing whether i was on the right side. you can't tell me you've never doubted the existence of your god(s) (i don't know what religion your part of).
it's like balancing on a stick for the rest of your life. you have to start somewhere and build up a foundation of your thinking to then use that to deduce your way of thinking further. i couldn't live knowing that my foundation might be a lie, it'd invalidate every decision i'd ever made based on my thinking.
it's so easy: humans don't like to admit they're wrong. it's not the being wrong that they don't like, it's the having to admit it to others.
if someone buys a console and then gets to hear he bought the wrong and inferior console, they'll go full defensive, because they don't want to admit they've picked the wrong option. in some cases, this leads to extreme denial and subsequent devaluing of anything connected to the competitor of their product.
the only one who can be slightly objective is someone who owns all or someone who owns none (perhaps better, because he'll only focus on objective info about the system and not on subjective own experiences with the consoles).
what you're saying is ''once a X, always an x''. that's like saying ''he shoplifted once, well he's going to do that for every day in his life now''. it makes no sense and you can't prove it.
blackrunie's comments