@Thanatos2k: So they say "games" and include all games, and that makes them biased. You say "games" should only include the games you want it to, and that means you're objective.
@guydude3412: Did you not even read enough to see that they also look at how many people identify as a "gamer", as opposed to just playing games, and take that distinction into account?
@Chatch09: Actually, the first Pokemon with one type that was weak to its other type was Bulbasaur, the first Pokemon in the Pokedex. I guess they ran out of ideas immediately.
@dexda: You don't know Pokemon very well, then. Bug is weak to Flying, Grass is weak to Poison, Rock is weak to Ground, and Flying is weak to Ice (I decided not to count the fact that Dragon is weak to Dragon).
There isn't anything overly unbalanced about the Fire/Water mix; it still has a number of weaknesses.
I didn't say there is a steam type; there is a Pokemon that can use heat to heat water, without the water putting out the heat. You should do some research on "kettles", they apply the same concept.
@dexda: The first generation had about 27 Pokemon with one type that was weak to its other type. I'm not sure which "fundamental rule" you are talking about.
Fire and water make steam, so a steam Pokemon that is Fire and Water type seems to make sense.
@bobafetthatesu: Ah, when you said "It will be fun after two years to see something other than Forza and Halo for a change." I thought you meant that the console only had Forza and Halo as exclusives after 2 years, and thus you were ignoring the other exclusives (like Sunset Overdrive). My mistake.
@bobafetthatesu: Regardless of whether or not you liked it, they had an original, large-scale, critically well received title that you ignored. As you say, there are even more titles that could be "argued" (which is to say, the only reason they "don't count" is that you don't want them to). It seems like the issue lies at least as much with you as it does with the X1.
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